Cooke v. Willmore
Cooke v. Willmore
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs, as partners, brought suit in Jackson County Circuit Court, against the defendant, who was former Sheriff of said county.
The first count in the declaration alleges that defend
To the declaration, several pleas are put in: 1st, Denying the agency and undertakings; 2nd, That his agency was revoked by the appointment of another agent; 3rd, Performance of his undertaking; 4th, Statute of limitations of six years.
Upon the trial of the cause, the plaintiffs read the receipt of defendant, signed as Sheriff) which recited that he had “received of James W. Draper, as agent of Kin-nard & Cooke, the following notes, for collection, executed to Kinnard & Cooke.” Then follows a list of the notes set out and described in the plaintiff’s declaration. The jury returned a verdict for defendant, and the Court refusing to grant a new trial, the plaintiffs appealed in error to this Court.
Upon the trial, it was proved that on several of the notes judgments were obtained in due time. Upon one
The defendant offered to prove by James W. Draper the testimony given by one McKinney on a former trial of this case, the said McKinney having died since said trial. Draper stated that he had no recollection of McKinney’s having been examined as a -witness in this case, but that he was examined in the trial of a cause between himself and defendant; but if he was examined as a witness upon the former trial of this case, his statement did not vary from what he said on the trial between himself and defendant; that he was present at the former trial of this cause, and heard the testimony on the trial, but did not remember that the deceased witness was then examined. It was proved by another witness that McKinney was examined in this case, and witness, Draper, was then allowed to state what he, McKinney, had said in the trial between Draper and defendant. To this plaintiffs excepted.
This testimony was improperly admitted. The testimony of McKinney, which Draper details, was given in the suit of Draper against defendant, and was held admissible by his Honor, the Circuit Judge, upon the ground that Draper stated that if McKinney was examined in the former trial of this case, his testimony did
His Honor, the Circuit Judge, charged the jury that, “you will not find against the defendant, unless the debtors are dead and their estates insolvent, or hopelessly insolvent, if living, even where it may appear that there has been want of reasonable diligence.” This charge is too strong against the plaintiffs. A Sheriff who gives his. receipt for the collection of a debt, becomes the agent for the collection of that debt, and is bound to use reasonable diligence. He must obtain a judgment and execution thereon within a reasonable time, and if he neglects to do so, and the debt is lost in consequence of the neglect, he is personally responsible, whether the loss be occasioned by the insolvency of the debtor, his removal from the country, or other cause.
For these errors the judgment of the Circuit Court will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.