delivered the opinion of the Court. The plaintiff in error has appealed from the judgment of the court below, dismissing his suit for the want of a sufficient bond for costs. The objections to the bond appear to be, that the day of the month of its date is left blank, and that it is given by a firm, signed by their firm name and style under seal. The suit was commenced on the 18th of September, 1851, and the bond for costs has the following endoi’sement, signed by the clerk: “The above bond approved by me, September 18,1851, and filed before writ issued.” On the hearing before the court of the issue upon the defendant’s motion to dismiss, the plaintiff produced the bond and endorsement referred to, and made part of the record, and the facts in evidence were, that the bond in question had been filed before the commencement of the suit, and approved by the clerk of the court as sufficient: that it had been signed, sealed, and delivered by J. H. Patterson, one of the firm of Byers & Patterson; that he was a resident of this State and responsible for the costs which might accrue in the suit in question; and that the plaintiff was a non-resident;
The statute requires the non-resident plaintiff, about to commence a suit in any circuit court, to file in the office of the clerk, the obligation of some responsible person, being a resident of this State, for the payment of all costs which may accrue in such action'.
The question here is not whether one partner can bind his co-partner, by an instrument under seal, so as to make the firm liable upon an obligation executed by one in their joint names, nor is there any question as to what authority or assent by the partner not signing will be sufficient to make such an obligation obligatory upon him. The bond was certainly executed by one of the firm, and as held in Day vs. Lafferty, 4 Ark. 450, it is good against him. Whenever it is admitted, as decided in Ferguson vs. The State Bank, 6 Eng. 512, that the plea of non est factum goes onlyto thepersonal dischargeof the party pleading it; andthatthe party, who executed the deed, continues liable, it follows that the statute in this case has been substantially complied with. Neither the defendant, nor any officer of the court, who may become interested in the bond for costs, has any right to insist that there shall be more than one security for costs, if he be a solvent and responsible person. The case stands as if there were two securities, and one of them for any cause not liable on the bond or irresponsible.
The date, though prima facie evidence of the time of the execution is not necessary to the validity of a deed, which takes effect from the time of its delivery.
If the Circuit Court thought the bond to be so informal or defective as likely to embarrass the defendant or the officers of the court, in the recovery upon it of their legal demands that would accrue in the progress of the suit, it might, according to its discretion, have ruled the plaintiff to furnish a bond free from any such objection, as it would, where there is a doubt of the continuing solvency of the security; but upon the facts stated here, the decision of the court absolutely dismissing the plaintiff’s suit is not, as we conceive, in accordance with strict law, or the reason of the statute.
The. judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to proceed therein according to law, and not inconsistent with this opinion.