Court Opinion

ID: 9300450
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:06:54.326992+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:39.935173
License: Public Domain

STORY, Circuit Justice.
Upon this statement of facts, I have no doubt, that the suit is not maintainable against all the defendants. It is the case of a joint judgment against three; and the suit is brought against two of the judgment debtors, who survive, and the administrator of the third judgment debtor, who is dead. • The general doctrine of the common law unquestionably is, that the judgment survives against the surviving debtors only, and is gone as to the deceased debtor. The administrator is sued in autre droit; but it is clear, that he is not suable in that capacity jointly with the other debtors. But the parties have agreed, that, if necessary, the writ and declaration may be amended, so as to become the ease .of a several suit against the administrator of the deceased debtor upon the judgment. And the question is thus presented, whether such a suit could be maintainable against him separately upon the joint judgment. I am of opinion, that it could not be so maintainable. As the judgment is joint, all the parties, who are living, and within the process of the court, must be joined in a suit upon that judgment. So the supreme court decided, in the case of Gilman v. Rives, 10 Pet. [35 U. S.] 298. But, in truth, this is not the most pressing part of the objection. The judgment survives against .the living judgment debtors; and can in no mode whatsoever. known to the common law, be enforced against the administrator of the deceased debtor. As to him, in its character as a judgment, it is functus officio.
The statutes of New Hampshire have not in any manner, helped this matter. The act of 1808 (Rev. Laws 1830,- p. 65), applies only to suits on joint contracts, while they remain such, and not to judgments. It does no more than the original bond has provided in the present ease; that is, it makes the contract several, as well as j-oint; so that it is suable as a several contract against the personal representatives of each deceased joint contractor. But the present is not a suit upon the original bond, as a several contract; but upon the joint judgment. Whether, after a joint judgment upon a joint and several contract, a several suit can be maintained upon the same contract severally against one of the debtors, or his personal representative; or whether it is merged in the judgment, is a question, which we need not meddle with in this caser for it does not arise. See on this point, Sheehy v. Mandeville, 6 Cranch [10 U. S.] 253; Lechmere v. Fletcher, 1 Cromp. & M. 634, 635. The act of 1822, § 12 (Rev. Laws 1S30, p. 336>. does not seem intended by its terms to go farther than the prior act of 1808. It provides, •‘that the estate of any person deceased, and the executor or administrator thereof, shall be liable for joint demands against the deceased, and any other person, in the same way and manner, as they would be liable, if such demands were several, as well as joint; unless it appear to have been the intention of the parties, that the demand should survive only against the longest liver.” It is difficult to-perceive, how this language could apply to-any other cases, except cases of contract voluntarily entered into by the parties, where they had an option to make their responsibility joint and several, or otherwise; and where the right of suit is still resting upon the original contract. It cannot, without violence to the terms, be applied to judgments; for no such thing is known, at the common law, as a joint and several judgment.
This view of the nature and operation of the statutes of New Hampshire renders it wholly unnecessary to consider another point, which has been suggested by the argument; and that is, whether a contract made with the United States for the payment of duties, under the-revenue laws of the United States, is, or can properly be deemed a local contract, to be governed by the state laws. Whenever that point arises directly in judgment, it may become necessary to consider the grounds and extent of the decisions of the supreme court, in Cox v. U. S., 6 Pet. [31 U. S.] 172, 203, and in Duncan v. U. S., 7 Pet. [32 U. S.] 435, 449. It is quite a different question, whether, upon a bill in equity properly framed, the United States might or might not have redress against the administrator. That would depend upon principles and facts wholly incapable of being properly considered in a court of law. In such a suit, the question would be presented, whether the debenture certificates ought not to be first deducted from the debt.
As to the other point, which, it is suggested, the case was intended to raise, whether the consent of John E. Abbot, the son and heir of the deceased, to the discharge of Barnabee. was a compliance witli the condition of tlie-discharge of Barnabee, provided for by the secretary of the treasury in his official instrument in the ease; I am of opinion, that it was not. The consent must have been given by the party himself, if living; if not living, by his personal representative; for the latter-only was capable of acting in the premises, so as to bind the estate of the deceased generally. The son, tho.ugli heir, was in the sense of law a mere stranger, having no privity in contract or responsibility, by which he could bind the general assets of the deceased. But at most he could bind himself, only so far as real estate should descend to him from the de*734ceased. My opinion, therefore, is, that, at law, upon the statement of facts, judgment ought to be entered for the defendants, that the plaintiffs take nothing by their writ.
The district judge concurs in this opinion, and therefore let judgment pass for the defendant.
[NOTE. For a bill in equity, brought to recover the amount of the same judgment out of , the assets of Abbot in the hands of the defend- ! ant, see Case No. 14,908.]