Crawford County IL Archives Court.....Steele, John Purcell V Ninian T 1850 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarch.org/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarch.org/il/ilfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Deb Haines http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00003.html#0000719 May 19, 2008, 6:50 am Source: Reports Of Cases Written: 1850 John Purcell, plaintiff in error, v. Ninian T. Steele et al., defendants in error. Error to Crawford. A forthcoming bond given by the defendant in an attachment suit, which stipulated that if he "failed to substantiate his claim, shall render up and have forthcoming the said property attached," etc., is in effect a statutory bond, and is assignable.(a) A person claiming the property attached should interplead, when a jury will inquire into the right of property, and if the finding shall be for the claimant, it will furnish a good excuse for not surrendering the property. This was an action brought in the Crawford Circuit Court by the plaintiff in error, against the defendants in error, upon a forthcoming bond. The facts of the case are set out in the opinion of the court. The plaintiff standing by his demurrer to the plea, the Circuit Court, Harlan, Judge, presiding, at September term, 1850, gave judgment for the defendant, dismissing the suit. C. Constable, for plaintiff in error: The condition to substantiate claim, though not required by the statute, does not vitiate the bond, such condition not being illegal; and the only result is, that no breach of such condition can be assigned and recovery had on such breach, and it is to be taken as not expressed in the bond. No performance, or readiness to perform such condition, can be pleaded in discharge of bond: U. S. Dig. vol. 1, sec. 55, p. 435; Hall v. Cushing, 9 Pick., 404; Peters' C. C. R., p. 47; 1 Pen., 120; 2 Pen. 500; United States v. Hipkin, 2 Hall's Am. Law Jour., 80; 1 Gallison, 87; Sanders v. Rives, 3 Stewart, 109. Part of condition to this bond is prescribed by the statute, and is easily divisible and very distinct from that part not prescribed, and we can recover on such prescribed condition after breach: U. S. Dig., vol. 1, sec. 62, p. 335; Vroom v. Smith, 2 Green's N. J. R., 479; 4 Wash. C. C. R., 620; 1 Gallison C. C., 99; 2 Bailey (S. Car.), 501. U. F. Linder, for defendants in error. Treat, C. J. Purcell sued out an attachment against Bogard, which was levied on a quantity of corn. Steele and Harness, as principals, with Bishop as surety, executed a forthcoming bond to the sheriff, the condition of which, after reciting the issuing and levying of the attachment and stating that Steele and Harness claimed to be the owners of the corn, is as follows: "Now, if the said Ninian J. Steele and Andrew P. Harness fail to substantiate said claim, shall render up and have forthcoming the said property, attached as aforesaid, to answer the judgment which shall be rendered by the court in the said suit instituted by the said John Purcell against the said Harrison H. Bogard, in the said county of Crawford, then, and in that case, this Obligation to become void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and virtue." Purcell recovered a judgment in the attachment suit; and, as assignee of the sheriff, brought an action against Steele and Harness on the forthcoming bond. The declaration assigned for breach, that Steele and Harness did not substantiate their claim to the property, and did not surrender the same to the sheriff to answer the judgment. The defendants pleaded that the corn, when levied on by the sheriff, was their property. The court overruled a demurrer to the plea, and judgment was entered for the defendants. It is insisted by the defendants that the declaration shows no cause of action, and, therefore, that the demurrer was properly overruled, without reference to the character of the plea. They contend that the bond does not pursue the statute, and is, therefore, not assignable, so as to authorize the plaintiff to sue thereon in his own name. The ninth section of the ninth chapter of the Revised Statutes provides that the officer serving an attachment shall retain the custody of the property attached, unless the person in whose possession the same may be found, shall enter into bond to the officer, conditioned that the property shall be forthcoming to answer the judgment that may be rendered in the suit; and the tenth section provides, if the bond be forfeited, that the officer may assign the same to the plaintiff, who may bring an action thereon in his own name. The bond in question complies with the requisitions of the statute in all respects, except in the addition of the provision that the obligors may substantiate their claim to the property. But the insertion of this clause does not vitiate the bond, or change its legal effect. The rights of the parties would be precisely the same, if it was omitted. A bond pursuing the statute exactly would imply everything that is contained in this instrument. The twenty-first section of the chapter before referred to, authorizes any person other than the defendant in the attachment to interplead and claim the property attached, and, in such case, the court is required to direct a jury to be empanneled to inquire into the right of property. Under this section, the defendants might have had their claim to the property investigated before the judgment was rendered against Bogard, or at least by interpleading before the judgment was entered, they might have avoided a forfeiture of the bond until the right of property was determined. They had this right independent of the peculiar provision in the bond. The provision secures them no additional or greater right. It does not mean that the doctrine of the right of property shall be a condition precedent to the forfeiture of the bond. Nor does it reserve to the defendants the right to substantiate their claim to the property in an action on the bond. If they had interpleaded in the attachment suit and claimed the property, and the right had been found in their favor, the finding would have been a good excuse for not surrendering the property, and could have been pleaded in bar of an action on the bond. But neglecting to interplead, and in that way substantiate their claim, they were bound to deliver the property to the sheriff, to answer the judgment recovered against Bogard. The declaration is good, and the plea is no sufficient answer to the breach assigned to the bond. Whether the defendants may not still put the right of property in issue, in an action of trespass against the sheriff or the plaintiff, for the seizure of the corn, is another question which does not now arise. The judgment of the Circuit Court must be reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Judgment reversed. ------------------------- (a) See Young v. Campbell, 5 Gil., 80; R. S. 1874, ch. 11, sec. 18; Carpenter v. Hoyt, 17 Ill., 529. Additional Comments: Reports of Cases Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Illinois from November Term, 1850, to June Term, 1851, both inclusive by E. Peck, Counsellor at Law. Volume XII. Reprinted from the Original Edition, with Annotations by William Gordon McMillan of the Chicago Bar. Callaghan & Company, Chicago, Ill. 1881. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/il/crawford/court/steele29gwl.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/ilfiles/ File size: 7.6 Kb