Court Opinion

ID: 8503209
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:24:42.533626+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:46.517876
License: Public Domain

By the court.

The statute of February 9, 1791, sec. 7, declares that all original writs shall be endorsed on the back thereof near the bottom, with the name of the plaintiff, if he be an inhabitant of this state, or in like manner by his agent or attorney, being an inhabitant of this state ; and where the plaintiff is not an inhabitant of this state, then the writ shall be endorsed in the manner aforesaid by some responsible person who is an inhabitant of this state, “ and the “plaintiff’s agent or attorney, who shall'endorse his name “ as aforesaid, shall be; liable.'in case of the plaintiff ’s liv- “ ing out of the state, or upon the neglect, inability or avoid- “ anee of the plaintiff and -return’ of: non est inventus, or “ that such execution as may have issued against the plain- “ tiff is unsatisfied, to pay the defendant all such costs as he “ shall recover, where the plaintiff shall not support his ac- “ tion, on scire facias to be brought against such endorser “ within one year,” &c.
When a judgment for costs is rendered against a plaintiff who is an inhabitant of this state, the endorser of his original writ is, under the statute, liable only upon the neglect, inability, or avoidance of such plaintiff, appearing by a regular return of an execution duly issued upon the judgment. In order, therefore, to charge an endorser in such a case, the defendant must sue out an execution upon the judgment, and have it regularly returned. The neglect, inability, or avoidance of the plaintiff can be proved only by the return upon the execution, and the endorser is not liable till the execution. has been returned;,;
But when the plaintiff, against whom such a judgment is rendered, is not an inhabitant of this st§te, the endorser of *338- the original writ becomes liable immediately, and no execution need be sued out in order to charge him. The stipulation of an endorser in such a case is that all costs which the defendant may recover against the plaintiff shall be paid as soon as judgment is rendered.
J. I. Swan, for the plaintiff.
In the present case it appears that Carr is an inhabitant of Vermont. The liability of the defendant does not, therefore, depend upon the return of the execution, and this objection is not well founded.