Case ID: dc_1/html/0233-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Cranch, J.,", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Long v. Oneale.
    An interlineation of an appeal-bond, by inserting the name of a new obligor, and his executing the bond as a surety, without the consent of the other sureties, makes the bond void.
    Debt on an appeal-bond — plea, non est factum.
    
    On the trial, Mr. Key, for the defendant, prayed the Court to instruct the jury, “ That if they should be satisfied, by the evidence, that the bond was signed, sealed and delivered by Mary Sweeny, and by J. T. Frost and the defendant, as her sureties, and was afterwards presented to Cornelius Coningham, (the justice who had rendered the judgment,) for his approbation and acceptance of the sureties, and was by him refused and rejected; and after which rejection was interlined, without the license, privity, and knowledge of the defendant, by inserting the name of Lund Washington, as a co-obligor, who, on the following day, without the privity, knowledge, and consent of the defendant, signed, sealed, and delivered the bond, which was afterwards approved by the justice, then such interlineation and execution of the said bond, by the said Lund Washington, rendered it void as to the defendant, and the plaintiff cannot recover in this suit.”
    
      Mr. Key, who argued the cause for the defendant,
    cited the following authorities, viz.: Pigot's case, 11 Co. 27; Shep. Touch. 63, 67, 69; Markham v. Gonaston, Cro. Eliz. 626; Esp. N. P. 223, 224; Zouch v. Clay, 2 Lev. 35; Stale of Maryland, use of Sim, v. Thomas Gantt, in the General Court of Maryland, (not reported.)
    
      Mr. Mason, for the plaintiff,
    cited the Stat. of Maryland, 1791, c. 68, <§> 5, and Esp. N. P. 224.
   Cranch, J.,

was of opinion that the instruction prayed by Mr. Key ought to be given; but Kilty, C. J., being of a different opinion, and Fitzhugh, J., being absent, the instruction was not given.

The defendant took a bill of exceptions, and upon a writ of error, the judgment was reversed by the Supreme Court of the United States. See 4 Cranch, 60.