Court Opinion

ID: 4932334
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:09:35.082579+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:32.013597
License: Public Domain

WaltoN, J.
This is an action on a poor debtor’s bond. It was tried by the judge of the superior court for the county of Cumberland, without the aid of a jury. The judge ruled as matter of law, first, that the bond was good at common law; second, that one of the alternative conditions of the bond was fulfilled by the debtor’s taking the oath therein nominated. To these rulings the plaintiff excepted.
1. It is claimed that the bond should be treated as a good statute bond. We think not. It was held in Guilford v. Delaney, 57 Maine, 589, that if the approval of a poor debtor’s bond does not show that the justices approving it were selected according to law, *72tbe bond is good only at common law. In this case the bond does not show that the justices were selected according to law. It does not, in fact, show how or by whom either of them was selected. The bond was, therefore, good only at common law, and the ruling to that effect was correct.
2. It is claimed that notwithstanding the bond was given while the Revised Statutes of 1857 were in force, yet, inasmuch as the disclosure did not take place till after the Revised Statutes of 1871 went into effect, the oath and other proceedings should have been under the latter. We think not. If the bond had been strictly a statute bond this claim would be well founded. But it was held in Randall v. Bowen, 48 Maine, 37, that where a debtor gives a bond which does not conform to the statute, and is, therefore, good only at common law, a forfeiture is saved if he takes the oath therein named, notwithstanding a new statute, changing the form- of the oath, is in force before the oath is taken.
3. It is claimed that notice to the creditors of the time and place of the disclosure was not sufficient, because the citation was served on only one of them. We think the notice was sufficient. It was in accordance with the requirements of the statutes in force when the bond was given; and also of the statutes in force at the time the citation was served; for, in this particular, no change in the statutes has taken place. Under either, a service upon one of the creditors, if there be more than one, is sufficient. R. S. of 1857, c. 113, § 24; R. S. of 1871, c. 113, § 27. We think it is immaterial, so far as the. service of citation is concerned, whether the bond is a valid statute bond, or a bond good only at common law. The bond being silent as to how the creditors were to be notified, notice according to the statute in force at the time the bond was given, and also according to the statutes in force at the time the citation was served, was, in our judgment, sufficient.
4. It is claimed that the conditions of the bond have not been fulfilled, because the debtor disclosed notes and accounts which •were not appraised and secured to the creditors, as required by the statute. This claim would be well founded if the bond in suit *73could be regarded as a valid statute bond. But it was held in Clark v. Metcalf, 38 Maine, 122, that in fulfilling the conditions of a poor debtor’s bond, which is good only at common law, the debtor is under no obligation to perform any other of the statutory provisions than those named in the bond; and that a disclosure of notes which are not appraised and secured to the creditor, as required by the statute, does not constitute a breach of the bond, where no such appraisal and assignment are therein provided for. No such appraisal or assignment is provided for in this bond. None were therefore required in order to fulfill its conditions.
5. It is claimed that the record of the justices does not show that they were disinterested, nor why the creditors did not select one of them, nor where the disclosure was had, nor that any disclosure was had. The record is in all these particulars as full as the record in Randall v. Bowen, before cited; and as the record was there held sufficient, we perceive no reason why this record should not be held sufficient. We think it must be.
We have now examined all the objections to the rulings of the judge of the superior court to which our attention has been called. We think none of them are valid. Exceptions overruled.

Judgment for defendant.

AppletoN, C. J.; CuttiNg, DickeksoN, and DaNfobth, JJ., concurred.