Court Opinion

ID: 6529306
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 19:59:27.281514+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:18.992407
License: Public Domain

COLLIER, C. J.
—
The plaintiff brought an action of debt, in the Circuit court of Madison, against the defendants. By the record, it is shewn that Jesse Searcy was in February, 1822, in that county, duly appointed ad*398ministrator of the goods and chattels, &e. of Charles Burras, then lately deceased, intestate, and that he executed an administration bond, in legal form, with Thomas Fearn and Henry Cook as his sureties, (the latter of whom is not here sued.)
The plaintiff then avers, that on the seventh day of April, eighteen hundred and twenty-cine, John Thurman, for whose benefit this action is brought, caused a suit to be instituted in the name of Isaac I jane and others, for his use, against Jesse Searcy, as administrator of Charles Burras deceased, and on the 20th November, of the same year, recovered a judgment according to the demand of the writ, for the sum of seventeen hundred and eighty 75-100 dollars for the debt, three hundred and forty-six 25-ICO dollars for damages, besides their costs, to be levied do bonis inicsiatis in the hands of the administrator, to be administered. R is also averred, that the judgment thus recovered, remains entirely un-reversed and unsatisfied, and that divers goods and chattels, &c. carne into the possession of Icese Cearcy to be administered, to wit, of the value of ten thousand dollars — more than sufficient to satisfy the judgment ahbve recited. Yet the administrator did not pay and satisfy that judgment, with the avails thereof, but wasted the same and converted them into his own use, to wit, on the-clay of December, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, at dec. h is then averred, in due form, that the administrator did not well and truly perform all the duties required of lúm, &c. Ey means of all which, the plaintiff, for the use, &c. hath sustained damages, &c. and by means of which, the bond of the defendants has become forfeited, &c.
To the declaration, the defendants demurred, and the demurrer being sustained, and judgment thereon rendered against the plaintiff, a writ of error has been prosecuted to this court for its reversal.
It is no valid objection to the declaration, that it does not disclose, that the assets which came to the possession of the administrator, were justly chargeable with. *399the demand in controversy, or that they were of value sufficient to discharge it, after the payment of all claims entitled to priority. Let it be conceded ex gratia argu-menti, that there are debts, which the right to have satisfied, imposes a paramount lien upon the estate of the intestate, as against the creditor now complaining, yet the disclosure of such a fact if allowable, must be made in a plea. It is entirely sufficient for the plaintiff to set forth such a case, as if proved, would entitle him to recover, without negativing in advance, matters which rest more particularly within the defendants knowledge. It is not for the plaintiff to anticipate every affirmation that may be made in the defence, and interpose in his declaration a formal denial. Such a course of pleading would he, not only objectionable, as calculated to overcharge the record, hut in itself eminently untechnical.*
Nor can the legal sufficiency of the declaration he successfully assailed, for the omission to disclose the names of the “others” who with Isaac Lane, for the use of Thurman, recovered the judgment against Searcy. It is more than possible that their name's do not appear in the record of the suit — if they do not, the recovery is not void, and the record would he admissible evidence. But even if 'the “ others” are shewn eo nomine by the judgment, yet the declaration would be sufficiently descriptive of • the case; that judgment is not the foundation of this action, hut is only recited as a fact, the existence of which is indispensable to the plaintiff’s right to recover, and according to a correct practice, it is well described, when so referred to, as to he identified with certainty. That this has been done, we think clear, and consider it no objection to the maintenance of the present action, that it is brought for the use of the party, who was the beneficial plaintiff in the judgment.
This brings us to consider the remaining, and most *400material exception taken by the defendants counsel to the declaration, — Can an action be brought upon the administration bond against the sureties, after the creditors claim has been ascertained by judgment, upon the allegation of its non-payment, and that the administrator has wasted more than an equal amount of the goods and chattels, &c. of the intestate, unless a devastavit has been first fixed upon the administrator, by a judgment recovered against him personally.
In order to a decision of this question, reference must be had to the condition of the bond, that wc may determine what arc the stipulations of the obligors. From the recital of the bond in the'declaration, we learn that it was taken in obedience to the act of June, eighteen hundred and twenty-one, — and its condition must be as follows: “ The condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas the above bounden Jesse Searcy, has been duly appointed administrator of the estate of Charles Burrus, deceased. Now if the said Jesse Searcy shall well and truly perform ail the duties which are or may be, by law required of him, as such administrator, then, the ab ove obligation tobe void, otherwise to remain i n full force.” The obligation imposed upon the principal, obliged him to a performance of the duties required by the laws then extant, or such as might he thereafter enacted. The 'Undertaking of the sureties is of a corresponding extent, viz: that the administrator shall faithfully perform the condition of his bond, and if he fails, then, they will answer for his default The breach alleged is the non-payment of a debt, recovered against the administrator de bonis intestatis, with which it is insisted he became personally chargeable; because he wasted the assets of the estate, to a greater amount in value. The sufficiency of this breach must depend upon the nature and extent of the duties which the law devolves upon an administrator. Without therefore entering at large upon an inquiry into his office, we will proceed to shew that it is a paramount duty of an administrator, honestly to appropriate the assets ■ which come to *401Ms possession, to the debts of the intestate. The twenty-seventh section of the act of eighteen hundred and three, after enacting that personal estate not bequeathed shall descend to, and be distributed among heirs in the same manner as lands descend by that act, contains a proviso as follows: “Provided, that the goods and chattels, or personal estate of any person deceased, whether testator or intestate shall stand chargeable with the payment of all the just debts and funeral expenses of the deceased, and the charges of settling the said estate, &c.” We need not inquire what an administrator was required to do by the common law, for here is a positive declaration, that the personal estate of the intestate that comes to his hands, must be first applied to the discharge of his debts; and this is a duty coming within the express terms of the condition of the administration bond, and cannot, it would seem, be neglected without causing its forfeiture.
Conceding that where the assets are ample, the nonpayment of a debt to which the estate of the intestate was liable, would be a literal breach of the bond, it is argued for the defendant, that no action will lie against the sureties until it is ascertained by verdict and judgment, that the administrator had wasted the goods and chattels, &c. that came to his hands. That such a conclusion resulted from the nature of the common law remedy, by which a devastavit was fixed, as well as fr'om the consideration, that the imputation of mismanagement of assets by the administrator, was a charge quasi criminal.
Anciently in England, if the sheriff returned nulla bona and a devastavit to a fieri facias de bonis t'estatoris aut intestatis, sued out on a judgment against an executor or administrator, it was sometimes the practice to sue out a capias ad satisfaciendum or a fieri facias de bo-nis propriis, against the executor or administrator. But the better and more frequent method was, to sue out a scire facias, and obtain an award of execution before suing out the fieri facias de bonis propriis. The most *402usual practice however, ivas upon the return of nulla bo-na to sue out a special fieri fiadas de bonis iestatoris aui iniestaiis, with a clause therein ot si Ubi constara potcrii, that the goods &c. had been wasted, then to levy de bo-nis propriis. And tills seems to have been the practice of the King’s Bench, until the time of Charles the First: hut in the 'common pleas, a practice prevailed from an early day upon the suggestion of a devastavit in a special writ of .fieri' facias, to direct the sheriff to inquire by a jury, whether the executor or administrator had wasted the'goodo, and if the jury found afliimatively, then a scire fiadas was sued out against the executor or administrator, and unless he made a good defence thereto, execution was awarded de bonis propriis. It after-wards became the practice of both courts, for the sahe of expedition, to incorporate the jieñ fiadas inquiry into one writ, thence called a sdre fieri inquiry. This writ recites the fit. fa. de bonis iestatoris emt intestada, the return of mdia bona; and then suggesting that the executor or administrator had converted the goods, &c. to the value of the debt and damages recovered, commands the sheriff to'levy the debt and damages-of the goods &e. of the testator or intestate, in the hands of the executor or administrator, if they could be levied thereof, but if it should appear to him, by the inquisition of a jury, that the executor or administrator had wasted the goods, &c., then to summon him to appear, &c* But the most usual mode of proceeding both in the King’s Bench and common pleas, is by an action of debt suggesting a devasia-vit:†
And the correct course of procedure, where the executor or administrator is alone sought to be charged,' is that we have mentioned as most usual in England at this day. Yet we cannot conceive why a creditor should be forced to pursue this remedy, before he is allowed to prosecute an action upon the statute obligation. The latter pan *403of the thirteenth section of the act of June, eighteen hundred and twenty-one, after giving the form of an administration bond, proceeds: “ Such bond shall not become void on the first recovery, and may be put in suit, and prosecuted from time, to time, against all or any one or moro of the obligors, in the name and at the costs of any person or persons, injured by a breach thereof, until the whole penalty shall be recovered thereon.” We have already shewn, that according to the literal import of tiie bond, it is forfeited whenever the administrator wastes the goods &(5. of the intestate,'to the prejudice of a creditor. Yet no one (however just his demand,) can be regarded as a creditor, for the purpose of subjecting the administrator to a personal accountability, who has not first made out a title, by recovering a judgment to be levied da bonds inlestalis, — Feull vs. Judge of Monroe County court;* Burnett vs. Harwell;† Eaton vs. Benefield;‡ Robbins, judge, &c. vs. Hayward;§—to have .a portion of the assets appropriated to his benefit. Bat wc can discover nothing cither in reason or .legal principle, requiring any further, proceeding against-the administrator, before the bond is suable against any or all its obligors.
Nor can we consider that there is -any force in the objection, that the charge oí a devastavit against the administrator, is an imputation of a criminal nature. The action of debt upon the bcr_d, strictly speaking, is ex contractu, though.in order to a recovery, it may be necessary to prove facts which the common law considered sufficient to shew, that tlie administrator was guilty of a tort. Yet it does not necessarily follow from thence, that if the administrator be liable, that he is reprehensible in morals; he may have incurred a responsibility under an ignorance of his duties. But grant that he has been criminally faithless in the performance of his trust, and no objection is furnished to the maintenance *404of the action. How often are. breaches- of contract shewn by proof of such facts, as evidence an entire destitution of moral principle, and frequently áccompanied with force; yet in such cases it has never been questioned, that the breach cannot be redressed in an action ex contráctil, in consequence of the defendant’s great culpability. For what have the sureties undertaken, if not for the hones! discharge of the duties of the administrator ? And what objection is there in principle, to a creditor assigning as a breach, that the administrator has not done that for which his sureties stipulated ? The declaration in the case at bar does nothing more — it charges a wrong upon the principal, and calls upon the sureties to repair the injury it has occasioned, according to their stipulations.
Thus far have we examined the arguments, upon what seems to us to be correct legal principle, we will now. examine it with reference to authority.
In Braxton, executor, &c. vs. Winslow, et. al,* the defendants in error sued an action of debt against the sureties, in an executor’s. bond, to subject them to the payment of ú bill of exchange, of which the testator of their principal, was the drawer. Oyer of the bond and condition was craved in the court below, and conditions performed pleaded. The replication traversed the plea; and charged a breach, in the executor’s not having administered according to law, and having wasted the assets in the payment of debts of an inferior, dignity, after the notice of protest for .non-payment o'f. the bill of 'exchange. Two questions were raised'in the Court of Appeals, — First, whether an action could be maintained at all for the benefit of a creditor upon an . executor’s bond, — Second, whether the action could be maintained before'a judgment first recovered by -the creditor against the representatives of the debtor, and an execution and return of nulla bona thereon.
*405The court considered it clear, that the action was maintainable for the benefit of a creditor.- And in respect to the second question, after having determined that the bond was prematurely put in suit, because no judgment 'had been recovered upon the bill of exchange, the court go farther and decide, that a judgment' creditor could not have the bond sued against the sureties, unless a devastavit was first fixed, upon the executor by a suit prosecuted against him on his judgment do bonij in-testatis. And this conclusion was attained from a course of reasoning as follows: That the suggestion of a de-vastavit rnay be likened to a criminal prosecution, and that an executor shall not he presumed guilty of it, until it is found against him hy the verdict of a jury — that though the statute of Yirginia.did not inhibit the creditor from going against the sureties in the first instance, yet it was an established principle of construction, that where a statute has given a new remedy, without pointing out the mode in which it is to be attained, the rules of the common law, and the practice of the courts, founded upon the reason of the thing, shall he pursued.
That the common law may be invoked, to .aid in the interpretation of a statute^ is a reasonable and just rule; but where a statute is plain and unambiguous in its terms, there is no room for the operation of the rule. If it is sought to charge an executor at common law, we liave already said, that the appropriate remedy is, an action of debt, suggesting a devastavit: but this was not the character of' the proceedings in that case. The' statute of Virginia, like our own, declares, in -express words, that the bond may be put in suit, for the benefit of creditors, &c. And the act itself being free fróm ambiguity, in considering it, the mind is naturally Ifed to the enquiry, what obligation was 'imposed by the bond, upon the principal and his sureties, and what amounted to a breach of its condition. - By thus reasoning, the conclusion would have been attained, that to maintain an action upon the bond, it was only necessary to shew a judgment, de bonis testatoris, and a waste of the assets *406by the'executor. The statute gave a remedy upon the bond, and the creditor, who had recovered his judgment against the executor, might put it in suit, or adopt such proceedings as were before in use, and unrepeated by the act. And the statute being silent as to the particular remedy it afforded, it was proper to refer to the-common law, to ascertain what was the appropriate action upon such a 'liability. But it is indeed difficult to conceive, what legal conclusion resulted, from a consideration, of the course to be pursued at- common law, in order to fix a devastavit, upon the executor.
This reasoning, recondite and farfetched as it may seem ; ■ however inconclusive it has, at different times, been regarded by the subordinate courts, has, whenever the same- question has arisen, been approved by the Virginia court of Appeals. In Call vs. Ruffin,* it was recognized; and in Gordon's adm'rs vs. the Justices of Frederick.† The case' of Braxton, ex'r, &c. vs. Winslow, et. al. was received, and reaffirmed; the court merely amplifying the argument employed by the bench in the latter case, and offering as an additional reason, why a devastavit, should be established, in a separate suit against the administrator, that by a law of that state, no security-for an executor or administrator, was chargeable beyond the assets of the testator or intestate, on account of any omission or mistake in pleading, by the executor or administrator. And it wag, therefore, proper-that the amount of the assets, wasted, should be ascertained by a verdict, and, judgment, before the sureties were called on. We cannot conceive-why this latter consideration should have had any influence; for the extent of the liability of the sureties, could have-been as readily ascertained, in ■ an action on the bond, as any other material' fact. - ’ ' ■ .
Since t-ho- decision/of Gordon's adm'rs vs. the Justices of Frederick; it may be remarked, tire law of Virginia' *407lias been changed, by a statute enacted in 1814, which dispenses with the intermediate suit, to fix a devastavit*
In 1829, an act was passed, by the General Assembly of Kentucky, authorising the suggestion of a devastavit, and the assignment of other breaches, in an action on the administration bond. Previous to that time, it was held in that state,, that it was necessary to bring a second suit, and convict the executor or administrator of a devastavit', before the sureties could be sued, on the bond — Clarke vs. the Commonwealth, -&c.†
So also, in Ohio, it has been determined, that the executor or administrator, must first be found guilty of a devastavit, before the bond can b® sued against the sureties. And for the reasons on which the court founds its opinion in. Gordon’s adm’rs vs. the Justices of Frederick,—see Gtewurt' Cs Chapliae vs..the Treasurer of Cham-pa] gne county, use &c.‡,
In Call vs. Ruffin, it was decided, that, a guardian’s bond, stood hi a. different predicament, from an execu-ior’s or aclmmisivátor’s, and that it was'competent to put it In suit against the sureties,, without having first obtained a judgment against the principal. And in Moore vs. Waller's heirs,§ it was held, that the statute, which gave an action on the administration bond, was merely cumulative, and did not oust the Chancellor of his jurisdiction in such cases; and in chancery, no previous suit wan necessary, to ascertain the extent of the executor’s liability, before a resort could- be had to the sureties, fio in Meads et. al. vs. Brooking,ǁ it was determined that after- a judgment- against an executor or administrator, as such, a fieri f acias, and return of nulla bona, an action against him. alone, on, his administration. bond, could always have been maintained, without any previous suit, suggesting a devastavit. Thebe three. *408cases do not appear to us to harmonize with the cases', of Braxton adm’r, &c. vs. Winslow, et. al. and Clarke vs. Commonwealth, &c. The conversion of the estate of the ward, by his guardian, is quite as much a tori, as the wasting of .the assets, by an administrator; and if, in the latter case, it he necessary to fix a personal responsibility, before the sureties can he called on to make good the loss, it is difficult to conjecture a reason, why the same rule should not obtain in the former case. So, if at law, the intermediate suit cannot be dispensed with, it would seem that equity could not hold it unnecessary, and o "hex to a party injured, a remedy against the sureties in the bond. That equity might give an ancillary remedy, or net preventively, by inhibiting the removal of property, until rights to be sought against the-sureties, could he litigated and determined, would seem reasonable — but that, that tribunal can exercise plenary jurisdiction in such a case, (the law forum, being open, to administer redress,) may well be questioned. And the case of Meade et. al. vs. Brooking, greatly weakens the authority Of Braxton, adm’r. vs. Winslow, et. al. by deciding that it is competent to try the question of a de-vastavit, hi a suit on the bond, against, the administrator. If it be regular to determine that fact, where the principal is a party, there can be no conceivable reason, why it may not also he litigated, where the sureties are made defendants, unless there be potency in the arguments, founded upon the statute, that the sureties are to be liable, only to the extent of the assets received by the administrator, and that a devastate being a,tort, is not triable against the sureties, on their contract.
Again: at common law, if an executor committed a devastavit, and died, his ekecutor was not chargeable for the .waste, upon the principle, that it was a personal tort, which died with the person.*
*409If it be necessary, then,- to convict the executor or administrator, of a devastavit, before suing on the bond, his death would certainly deprive the party, who had a right to complain of it, of a remedy, at least at law. in Kentucky they obviate the difficulty by allowing the sureties to be sued in equity, without having successful-, ly prosecuted the intermediate suit, against the administrator. We have already questioned the general jurisdiction -of that court, over the subject. .
If the administrator has used the assets, so as to- make a profit to himself, there is no doubt, but his personal representatives may be proceeded, against, in equit]^— Price vs. Morgan.* Yet,' ‘it may well be questioned, whether, if the devastavit be the result of negligence or inattention, on the part of the-executor, relief could be had in any forum, against the representative of an executor or administrator. The consideration that the sureties would not be liable, at least at law, upon the administration bond, if their principal dies before he is charged, is certainly entitled to weight, in determining whether the intermediate suit is essential.- ■
But we are not left to disprove, by the force of argument, or indirect authority, the necessity of a second suit, in order to fix the devastavit, before proceeding against the sureties on their bond: ■ For decisions to the point, equal in respectability and numbers, to those cited, are before us. ■ • '
In the case of the People vs. Dunlap†, an action of debt was brought, against the defendant, as a surety in an administration’bond, suggesting a devastavit, by the administratrix. The court determined, that the nonpayment of a judgment, obtained against the adminis-tratrix, might be assigned, as a breach of. the condition of the bond. In. the opinion, this language is employed: “What is a forfeiture of the bond? Most certainly, an unfaithful administration-of' the estate-of the intestate,. *410is not applying the goods, chattels, and credits of the deceased, to the payment of his debts.” Again: “ A conversion of the effects of the intestate, to the private use of the administrator, leaving the debts unpaid, is a violation of the trust reposed in the administrator, and a breach of the condition of the bond, in not administering the goods, chattels, and credits, according' to latv.”
This is an authority to shew, that the criterion by which the liability of the sureties is ascertained, is the condition of their bond, without regard to the proceeding at common law, to subject their principa], do bonis-propriis.
So in Willey vs. Paulk, el. al.* debt was brought on a probate bond, ■ against' the defendants, as the sureties of an executor. The court held, that though the defendants were not parties to the suit, against the executor, yet they were privies in contract; and that the case of principal and surety, according to Pothier is not within the rule res inier alios acia. Further : tile creditor has established his. claim in due course of law, and that there can be no doubt of his right to sue-the bond' against the sureties, and recover for a dcvaslavil. The editor of 'Wheeler’s Abridgment, vl. 5, p. 046, cites Jones vs. Anderson,† to the same effect. We have not the volume, in which the case is reported, before us, and the editor merely notices it as deciding the point, that no suit can bo brought upon an administration bond, against the sureties, until the administrator has been called to account, and a judgment against him. So that wc are unprepared to say whether it determines any other principle. ' .
And in Coney, Judge, &c. vs. Williams, et al.‡ an'action of debt was brought on the administration bond; to which the defendants, (having set out on oyer, the bond and condition) pleaded performance generally. The. plaintiff replied, a judgment recovered against the ad~ *411ministrattir, and its non-payment, though they had in their hands sufficient assets for that purpose. .The court say — “Whatever may he the construction in England, it must be considered as settled with us; and so is the practice, that the non-payment of a debt, after it has been ascertained, by a judgment of court, or by commissioners, is a breach of the condition of an administration bo'nd, as an unfaithful administration.”*
The case of ike Archbishop of Can. vs. Willis,† has been relied on, as authority to shew that the sureties cannot bq sued, until the administrator is convicted of a devasiavii. That point did not arise in. the case. The only point adjudged in regard to a’creditor, is, that the terms of the condition of the bond required the administrator to render his account to the Ordinary; and that the non-payment of a debt, was not a breach.
In Greerside, &c. vs. Benson, Spc.‡ Lord Hardwiclte recognized a 'judgment on an administration bond, at the suit of a creditor, and made it the basis of a decree.
And, in the Archbishop of Can. vs. House,§ Lord Mansfield, sustained by all the Judges, suffered a suit to proceed on an administration bond, for the benefit of a creditor'; so that the case; in Salkeld, which, has -been cited at the bar, and referred to in'the ciase, in Ohio, as an authority for its judgment,- we discover, has been, itself, overruled. .
■ In Indiana, a justice of .the peace, is required to give bond, “ with good freehold security, for the faithful disf charge of his duty, and for paying over, on demand, to the proper person, authorized or entitled to receive the same, all moneys that might come into his hands..” On such a bond, the- Supreme court of that state, adjudged It competent, to sue the principal 'and his sureties, and to recover forall acts of the justice committed,'by vir-tu® of his office, and for which, exclusively of the .bond, *412he would he individually responsible;”' and this, without first ascertaining the liability of the principal, in a previous suit. — The State, &c. vs. Flinn, et. al.*
It has been, heretofore, determined by this court, that an action of debt, suggesting a devastavit, would lie on a judgment, de bonis intestatis, aghinst an administrator, either before or after the issuance of an execution,— Burke vs. ■Adkins et. ux:† It is, therefore,’no objection to the declaration, that it does not aver,, that a fi. fa. issued, and was returned nulla bona.. - •
Lét this review of the authorities serve, to shew the ground, on which rests our opinion, that the declaration in the case, before,ús, discloses a good cause of action. And as the case must be remitted to the Circuit court, it may ■ be well to settle several other questions, which have been incidentally noticed at the argument, and which inay arise on the trial..
At the'- time the bo,nd sued on,' was executed, no executor or administrator; was to be liable, out of their individual estates, for not pleading, mispleading, • or false pleading in, or to, any action whatever, which may be brought against them, as such. This law was changed, in 1826, so far as it relates to the executor or administrator ; and by the repealing statute, it whs .enacted, that “no’security for an executor or administrator, shah be'chargeable, beyond the assets of the testator or intestate, on account of any omission or mistake, in pleading, of the executor or 'administrator-.” The old law changed the common law, and was more favorable to the administrator, while the act of 1826, restored the common law, and subjected him to a recovery,, as for-a devastavit., for1 not pleading, ,&c—Garrow vs. Emanuel.‡
It is entirely immaterial to the surety here, whether the first or the last statute, admeasures the extent of his liability; for under neither, can he be. charged, beyond the assets of the intestate.
*413As the surety can only he liable to the amount of as-cset», it -will be necessary for the jury, not only to find ■the issue for the plaintiff, but also, the extent to which the administrator has wasted the assets — Fairfax vs. Fairfax :* — Sturdivant vs. Raines:†—Burnett vs. Harwell:‡ Gardner’s adm’rs vs. Vidal :§
It will follow from what we have said, that though an administrator may be charged, for a constructive waste, yet, to authorise a recovery, against his surety, an actual devastavit must be shewn.
It remains but to add, that the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.

 13 Johns. R. 437; 1 Bay’s R. 456.

 See form of writ, 1 Saund. R. 303.

 1 Saund. R.219, note 7.

2 Porter’s R. 538;

2 Blackford’s R. 52;

3 Leigh’s R. 89;

16 Mass.R. 524.

1 Wash. R. 31.

 1 Call's R. 333.

 1 Munf. R. 1.

Vide Revised Code, ch. 104; sec. 63; Ed. 1819; and Allen vs. Cunningham—3 Leigh’s R. 395.

5 Mon. R. 99.—See also 1 J. J. Marshall’s R. 183—2 Ib. 19.

4 Ohio R. 98.

1 Marshall’s R. 489.

 Munf. R. 548

 Tucke’s case—3 Leon’s R. 241. Browne vs. Collins—1 Vent’s. R. 292. 1 Saund. R. 219, note 7. Anthony vs. McCall—3 Blackford’s R. 86.

2 Chan. Cases, 217.

 13 Johns. R. 437.

6 Conn. R. 74.

4 McCord’s R. 113.

9 Mass. R. 114.

14 Mass. R. 105—15 ibid. 6—16 ibid. 524—3 Conn. R. 289.

1 Salk. R. 315.

3 Atk. R. 248.

 1 Cowp. R. 140.

3 Blackford R. 72.

2 Porter R. 236.

3 Stewart R. 285.

5 Cranch R 19

1 Leigh’s R 481

3 Ib. 89

6 Rand. 160.