Perry v. Starke
Perry v. Starke
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of debt upon a guardian’s bond. The breach of the condition of the bond assigned in the declaration, is the failure of the guardian to account for and pay over the sum of fifteen hundred and seventy-two dollars and sixty-seven cents, of the fund in his hands belonging to his former wards, for whose use this suit is brought.
The errors assigned and relied on relate to mere matters of practice.
It appears that the declaration was filed at the term to which the process was returnable. The defendant failed to appear, and no further step was taken at that term. At the following term, the record shows that “the defendants being solemnly called, came not, but made default;” and thereupon a jury was empanelled inslanter, to enquire what damages the plaintiffs had sustained by reason of the breach of the condition of the bond declared on. Damages were assessed to the amount of twelve hundred and fifty-three dollars and fourteen cents,
These proceedings, we think, are irregular in two respects. The first irregularity is the omission of the court to render a judgment by default and to award a writ of enquiry, on the failure of the defendants, upon being called, to appear and make defence to the action. The second irregularity, and the main one for which we feel constrained to reverse the judgment, is, that the writ of enquiry was executed at the same term at which the defendants were called upon tq appear and make defence. By the act of 1794, ch. 1, sec. 26, the defendant is required to appear and make defence, (unless upon sufficient cause the time for pleading be enlarged by the court, within the first three days after the time allotted for filing the declaration;) and on his failure to do so, “the plaintiff may have judgment by default, which, in actions of debt, shall be final, unless where damages are suggested on the roll, and in that case and others not herein specially provided for when the recovery shall be in damages, a writ of enquiry shall be executed at the next succeeding term.
The proper construction of this provision of the statute is obvious and free from all difficulty. Although the defendant may have omitted to plead to the action and submitted to a judgment by default, still he has the unquestionable right, on the execution of the writ of enqui-ry, to appear and adduce any legal evidence for the purpose of mitigating the damages sought to be recovered against him. Evidence on the part of the plaintiff is not unfrequently alike necessary. Hence the provision that the writ of enquiry shall not be executed until the next
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed; a judgment by default will be rendered here, and a writ of enquiry awarded, but the cause will be remanded to have said writ of enquiry executed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.