Williams v. Miller ex rel. Pulliam
Williams v. Miller ex rel. Pulliam
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
J. W. Matthews, a resident of Marshall county, Mississippi, made two notes in October, 1859, payable to Barnett Graham. On the 24th of December, 1859, said Graham transferred said notes to C. S. Palmore by the following instrument:
“Memphis, Tenn., Dec. 24, 1879.
“ I transfer the within notes to C. S. Palmore, and agree to be liable after the maker of the notes is diligently sued to insolvency. Barnett Graham.”
Palmore afterward endorsed the notes to Joel L. Pulliam, guaranteing the payment of them after the maker of the notes should be sued to insolvency.
This suit is brought in the name of the administrator of Palmore for the use of Pulliam, the last en-dorsee. The declaration, after describing the notes setting out the transfers, bases the right to recover on the averment that the maker of the notes had been
Defendant filed a number of pleas to the declaration, the first two being denials of the endorsements set out in the declaration, the next two denying that the maker of the notes had been diligently sued to insolvency, and avering that by the use of fair and reasonable diligence the money could have been made; the fifth and sixth pleas deny that the defendant, as executor, is indebted to plaintiff in manner and form as alleged, thus tendering the general issue on the declaration. The other pleas need not be noticed, being equivalent to payment and statute of limitations. Upon the issue thus made the parties went to trial, when a verdict was rendered by the jury for the plaintiff, under the instructions of the court, from which an appeal in error brings the case to this court. From the statement it .is seen that the only question presented to the jury was the liability of defendant growing out of the facts averred in the declaration, that is, the making of the endorsements and the guaranty therein contained, and the compliance by the plaintiff with the terms of the guaranty by ■ having sued the maker of the note diligently to insolvency, and failure to realize his debt by such legal proceedings. This is the sole ground on which the claim of the plaintiff is averred to exist, which he is compelled to maintain in order to a recovery, and which he proposed to prove by way of charging defendant with liability.
The party seeking to charge another on such contract must show that the liability has arisen by way of compliance on his part with the conditions annexed by the agreements, whatever they may be. This would exclude the idea of any notice to be given in a case like this, if failure to make the money out of the maker by the means stipulated for, and only require that the conditions on which the guarantor's liability is contracted to arise, should be shown to exist in order to recovery. If any notice of performance of ’ these conditions is desired, the party should stipulate for it.
But coming back to the case in hand. It is clear the only questions that can arise on the pleadings and issues before us, are as to whether the plaintiff has made out his case by showing that the maker had beep diligently sued to insolvency, and the debt could not be realized. The verdict of the jury is a prima facie conclusion on the facts of the case at least, so that the main question is, whether there was any error of law in the rulings of his honor upon the admis
How the facts are from the proof in the record, or what would have been our judgment on them if called on to decide upon them in the first place, we need not at present inquire. The jury have passed on the question, and for the present we assume they had evidence on which their findings might rest. The question we consider is, did his Honor, the Circuit Judge, charge the law correctly on the issues submitted to the jury, or is there any error in said instructions ?
Before examining the matter of the charge of the court, it is proper to dispose of a preliminary question of practice presented by the facts stated in the record. On the trial of the case after the evidence had closed, and argument of counsel, the court, before delivering his charge to the jury, asked counsel on both sides if they had prepared any written instructions which they wished given to the jury, to which
This was about 11 o’clock in the forenoon, the jury retired with the case, and the court proceeded to other business. Next morning, after the minutes were read and signed, Judge Wright presented to the court a series of instructions, fourteen in number, and made part of the bill of exceptions, and requested the court to recall the jury and charge upon the points therein presented. The court read the elaborate request, handed them to counsel for the plaintiff to see if he wished to prepare counter instructions. A request was pre^-sented, as stated, by counsel, that the jury should withhold their verdict until they should be again instructed by the court as requested by Judge Wright,
Upon these facts we hold his Honor did not err in the practice adopted, that after he had charged the jury, if further or different instructions were desired by either party, it was the duty of such party to present the instructions desired, in writing, if so required by the court, and the far better practice is to require such requests to be in writing, as preventing mistake and unnecessary disputes between the counsel and court as. to what was' requested, and if the party was not prepared to present the points on which additional instructions were desired, he should have asked for reasonable time to do so, which should be granted in a proper case in the sound discretion of the court. But to ask that the court shall, after he has charged the jury, take so general a question as the line of argument of counsel and give the jury instructions on the case as thus presented, is to fail entirely to designate either the point of objection to what has been charged, or to suggest or specify a point omitted on which instructions are requested. This practice is too general to be permitted, and no court can be required to respond to so pointless a request. The opposite practice is easy to be conformed to, and serves to present distinctly to the mind of the court the ques
In this view of the record we can but look at the charge as given and see if there is either any affirmative error therein or such failure to give the law correctly in the case, as would mislead the jury in coming to a proper conclusion, and if no such errors are found, then the action of the court must be held to be correct, and no reversal can be bad for matter contained in the charge.
The principle is settled that these restrictive endorsements are special contracts, to be construed as any other contract, so as to carry out the intention of the parties, the party being bound. only by the terms of his undertaking. See 7 Heis., 608. ¥e need but read this contract to see that the guarantor has only agreed to be liable on the one condition on which the declaration goes, that is, that the endorser should sue Matthews, the maker, diligently to insolvency. When this was done and the debt not realized, the liability of Graham as guarantor arose, but not before. We need not say how this would be if Matthews had been insolvent at the date of the guaranty. That question is not before us, as it is conceded he had abundant property out of which the debt could have been made at that time. The proof shows that suit was brought in due time, and judgment duly had. The charge of his Honor was short aud substantially as follows: “That the jury must fino
The first proposition contested in this charge is, that if it was not the fault of plaintiff or his attorneys that the sheriff failed to make the money on the execution by the next term of the court, that is,
The proposition assumes that the sheriff had been or might have been guilty of breach of official duty in not making the money, but if this was not the fault of plaintiff or his attorneys, then such breach of official duty was not sufficient defense to this action. On this question the facts are about these. The execution issued and came to hand of the sheriff in due time. He says he had been sheriff for many years in Mai’shall county; that his uniform habit had been, in such cases, to notify the party defendant, and if he was responsible the money was paid by the return day of the process. He says he rarely made a levy unless there were some special circumstances in the case making it necessary.
Before the return term, January 19, 1861, the State of Mississippi seceded, and the whole country, as the proof shows, and we all know, was filled with the din of preparation for war, so that no court was held at March term. The general state of the country, as well as public sentiment, he says, was against the collection of money by compulsory process, and by common consent and in obedience to this sentiihent, all process of this kind was suspended.
He adds, a man or a public officer’s safety was endangered by any act in' opposition to this public sentiment which had taken possession of the minds of the whole community, to which there was no exception at the time. For these reasons, he says, he
If he returned the execution, as . is probable he did, it was with the return, “suspended by the condition of the country.” Whether this is a sufficient defense to the officer in a. proceeding against him for failure to make the money, we need not now determine. Certain it is, .that it seems to present a state of facts calling for the application of the maxim, “that in the midst of arms the law is silent,” if any state of things can do so.
It would be an extremely hard rule that would require a public officer to brave the danger incident to his situation by enforcing an execution against the mass of public war 'sentiment thus depicted as aroused, when such a step would probably be deemed a breach of his loyalty to the cause of the excited masses around him. It will not do to judge his conduct with his then surroundings, from the standpoint of the present, with the quiet of peace pervading the land. Assuming him liable, however, is the plaintiff bound now to look to him, or was he bound to have proceeded against him and sureties before his right accrues to go on the guarantor, because this is included in the terms and purview of his contract to “sue Matthews diligently to insolvency” before Graham was bound to respond to the demand? A most ingenious argument is pressed on us by the counsel' of defendant in favor of this proposition. To this we cannot assent.
Authorities are cited that may serve, by ingenious
The court, in answer to this, did say, arguendo, that the remedy as well as attachment which might have been resorted to is but an incident of the suit between the plaintiff and defendant to the execution, of which the proceeding against the officer was a part, and the jurisdiction for this was on the original suit, p. 19. While this may be conceded, it does not present the question now before us, and it is far from adjudging it. It might well have been held that the officer could not defeat the plaintiff’s remedy against him in such a case, and deprive the court of jurisdiction to enforce the proper execution of its process, without involving the proposition that a guarantor who had bound himself, and is sought to be held strictly to his contract, to sue another debtor to insolvency, should also be required to sue the sheriff and his sureties to like insolvency under the same contract.
The other case is Eason v. Dixon, 2 Devenux & Battle Law R., 78, where a party endorsed a consta
This was all very well, but the court does not even hold this was a guaranty, as it certainly was not such a one as is now before us, on the assumption that it was a guaranty on transfer of a constable’s receipt for collecting a claim, that the liability of both the debtor and the constable had been assigned, and was in the minds of the parties to the contract, and shall have been duly exhausted before going on the assumed guarantor. We could not so construe this contract unless we can assume that Graham contracted not only that Matthews should be sued to insolvency, as we have said, but also the sheriff and his sureties, and we may add, any other officer whose duty it was to perform an official ministerial act in connection with the 'case. The clerk and his sureties,- if they had failed to issue execution properly, and loss had been incurred, would equally have been included. This ^ould be to enlarge the contract beyond what the parties have expressed or intimated— not to construe a contract, but to make one. The
There being no error on this point, if the' defendant desired further instructions presenting the question of proper diligence on the part of plaintiff or his attorneys in seeing that the sheriff did not neglect his duty, or in urging or requiring, he should use more than his usual activity in securing payment of the claim, and that this question should be passed on by the jury, it was his duty to have presented the point distinctly to the court, with the request that the jury be so instructed. This he failed to do, except in the general way we have stated. No error can, therefore, be predicated of the failure of the court in not doing specifically what it was not requested to do. The defendant must be held to have waived instructions on the point thus omitted. Nor is the question before us as to whether plaintiff’s attorneys should have done more than have the. execution in the hands of the sheriff, or than was done. No further instructions having been requested on this subject than was given by his Honor, that the failure should not be the result of any fault on their part; nor whether an exe
It is said parol proof was admitted of the facts of other judgments prior to this, and that like proof is found of the fact of widow’s dower being assigned out of the home tract, and that the insolvency of the estate had been suggested.
The sufficient answer to all this is, that this testimony is given in response to questions put by defendant on cross-examination — questions that reasonably called for such answers, and thus got before the jury without any exception to it. That at the foot of this deposition is an endorsement requiring the cross-interrogatives to be fully answered, and on these terms assent is giveh to the taking of the deposition waiving all mere matters of form. This is signed Wright and Stokes, attorneys for the defendant.
On motion of defendant’s counsel, portions of testimony bearing on some of these questions was ruled out by the court or withdrawn from the jury, so far as brought out in the depositions of Falconer and
The only other question deemed necessary for decision is, whether the holder of the paper was bound to exhaust property or sue the maker of the notes to insolvency in Tennessee as well as in Mississippi. It is shown that Pulliam l-esided in Tennessee and Matthews in Marshall county, Mississippi, when the notes, were made, and continued to reside there till his. death, or at any rate that was his home. It further-appears he had some considerable estate in the city-of Memphis, which has been administered there by an administrator appointed by the County Court of Shelby-county. We hold the fair construction of this contract is, that the party shall be diligently prosecuted to insolvency in the courts of his domicile. It was. there and not elsewhere, as a matter of course, he-was to be sued, and that suit diligently prosecuted. This excludes the idea that he was to be sued diligently somewhere else, or both where he lived and; also wherever he might have property.
This disposes of all the material questions in this case. We add that after a careful examination of the record, the ends of justice have been fairly reached in this result. It is the case simply of a party receiving these notes with the guaranty on them to sue diligently the maker. Suit was brought at once, judgment obtained in due time, execution issued and placed in the hands of the officer of the law, whose duty it was to execute the process and make the money.
The debtor was amply solvent at the time, and the prudence of an ordinarily diligent and energetic creditor would not have suggested any need for any extraordinary steps beyond this to make the money, under the state of facts then existent.
But in a few days after this execution came to the hands of the sheriff, the election of Mr. Lincoln changed the entire current of business, and all was excitement and preparation for the great struggle that followed. Before the return term of the execution it became perilous in the extreme, if not impossible, all things considered, to execute it. Courts then ceased to be held, and so remained until after the war. This debt stood suspended — all other debts of the time were — simply sharing the fate of all others. There
No reason can be given why this plaintiff shall be held responsible and lose his debt because of this untoward state of things,, for which he was not responsible more than others. This would be to impose the entire burden of the war on him to the extent of his claims, and make him forfeit his rights because of that against which he was powerless to prevent, and could in nowise by any human prudence have provided against.
On the whole, we see no reason to be dissatisfied with the result, and affirm the judgment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.