Wilson v. Lilly

Holman, J.

Judgment on motion in favour of Lilly, auditor of public accounts, against Wilson, sheriff and collector of Fayette county, and Crisler, Vincent, and Conner, his sureties. The notice is defective. It does not set forth nor even refer to the bond by which alone the sureties could become liable. The case therefore comes directly within the principle established in the cases of Dawson v. Shaver et al. and Lemon et al. v. Hay, Nov. term, 1822; which were both reversed, because the notices did not set forth nor describe the bonds, by which alone the sureties could be charged (1). The act o.f assembly under which this motion was made, is not, in this particular, materially variant from the acts by which those cases were regulated. The decision must therefore be the same.

Per Curiam.

The judgment is reversed with costs.

Ante, pp. 204, 227. Wilson himself was liable independently of the bond. The common law remedy in assumpsit, for money had and received, would have lain against him alone. The Board of Commissioners of Gibson County v. Harrington, ante, p. 260.