Keeling v. Stokes
Keeling v. Stokes
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On May 19, 1873, respondent, Frances E. Stokes, recovered three judgments against one L. P. Fields, as principal, and Thomas Hart and John Grider, as endorsers, of certain promissory notes, before one Hailey, a justice of the peace, one of said judgments being for $461, and the other two for $346 each, to all of which the name of complainant was entered as stayor. On September 12, 1877, this hill was filed to enjoin the sale of property of the complainant levied upon by virtue of executions issued upon these judgments, upon the alleged ground that the name of complainant had been placed as stayor to said judgments without his authority or consent, and that he was not legally bound as such stayor. The chancellor granted the
There is an irreconcilable conflict between the testimony of the complainant and three other witnesses who testify as to the transaction, and some apparent conflict between some of the other witnesses,' but the weight of the testimony, we think, satisfactorily establishes the following facts: Frances E. Stokes was at the time a married woman; Fields was solvent. Sometime after the two days allowed by law for the stay of execution had expired — how long does not appear— the complainant, who was in bad health, was in the town of Wartrace, where the justice who rendered the judgments resided and had his office, and was sitting in his spring wagon at some distance from the justice’s office. Fields applied to the justice to go with him to where the complainant was, to see if he would not stay said judgments for him. They accordingly went to where complainant was sitting in his wagon — the justice taking the warrants in his pocket — where, as is shown by the weight of the proof, Fields applied to complainant to stay said judgments, and after some conversation, in which the number and about the aggregate amounts of the judgments, and the parties in favor and against whom they were rendered were .stated to him, he reluctantly agreed to stay said judgments, and authorized the justice to sign his name' to the same on his docket as such, and went away.
It is insisted, first, that as the time allowed by law for the stay of executions had expired, and as the justice had no authority at the time to accept such stayor, the subsequent consent and acceptance by the plaintiff of said stay, could not have the effect to bind the complainant as such.
Where the security for stay is entered after the two days, the consent of the plaintiff will be presumed in the absence of proof: 1 Hum., 274; 5 Head, 627; 3 Lea, 273.
And where a stayor in the absence of the justice, wrote his name as stayor, after the two days had expired, he was bound by the subsequent assent of the justice and the plaintiff, manifested by their acquiesence: 3 Head, 627. The principle decided in these cases settles this question adverse to the complainant. •
It is further contended, howevér, that the justice had no authority to receive the stay at any other place than his office, and while it is conceded that his office may be for the time being at any place in his county where he tries a cause and renders his judgment, yet it is insisted that he had no authority to receive the stay at any other place except at his regular office, or at the place where he rendered these judgments, and that his acceptance of authority from the complainant at a place away from his office, and where he had not rendered the judgments, to place his name on his docket as stayor of said judgments was void, and conferred no authority upon him to do so, and hence the complainant was not bound thereby. But in the case of Cheatham v. Brien, 3 Head, 551, it was held that the place where an official act is done by a justice is his office for that particular pur
The acceptance of a stay by a justice is as plainly a judicial act as the rendition of a judgment, for the stay of an execution is, in effect, the confession of a judgment: Henegar v. Mee, 4 Sneed, 33. And it is not necessary that the stayor should be present before the justice at the time his name is entered upon the docket as such, he having previously authorized it: 4 Sneed, 35; 3 Head, 353, Id., 554; 7 Heis., 292.
An agreement to become stayor made before the justice at a place other than his office, and subsequently entered by him on his docket is valid: Smith v. Hart, 10 Heis., 468.
These cases have virtually overruled the holding as to this question in the earlier cases of Hickman v. Williams, M. & Y., 116; Caperton v. Gray, 4 Yer., 563, and Barnes v. Dick, 9 Yer., 430.
We hold, therefore, that the verbal authority given by the complainant to the justice, when sought for that purpose, though not at his regular office or the place where the judgments were rendered, to place his name upon his docket as stayor to said judgments, and his so entering it in pursuance of said authority, the subsequent consent and acquiesence of the plaintiff, did render the complainant liable and' bind him as such stayor. He has therefore failed to make out a case which entitles him to relief.
The exceptions to the report of the Referees will be disallowed, the report confirmed, the decree of the chancellor reversed, and the bill dismissed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John B. Keeling v. Frances E. Stokes
- Status
- Published