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John G. Shields, Appellant, v. Isaac Thomas, and Mary, his Wife, Nancy Pirtle, John B. Goldsbury, Thomas Starks, and Elizabeth, his Wife, and James Pickett, and Ann, his Wife U.S. 253 (1856)

handle is hein.slavery/ussccases0204 and id is 1 raw text is: DECEMBER         TERM, 1855.                 253
Shields v. Thomas et al.
for the contractor, according to the monthly estimates as the
work progressed, and had finally dismissed him, so as to exclude
his claim for the stock reserved when his contract had been ful-
filled, there could have been no ground for affirming that a
breach of the covenants had not been made by the corporation,
and that damages were not due.
There would have been no argument to support the allega-
tion, that the contractor was a corporator to the extent of the
stock which should have been reserved. But, as we interpret the
declaration, its averments have this scope and operation.
It was the duty of the arbitrator to ascertain the truth of these
charges. They were the precise subject of the reference. The
arbitrator has explained with clearness in his testimony his con-
clusion on the subject of this stock, that the contractor had no
title to the shares; that is, that he had not been paid by the
appropriation of so much reserved stock for his use. This con-
clusion of his is a final decision on the question, for this court
cannot revise his mistakes, either of law or of fact, if such hiad
been established. Burchell v. Marsh, 17 How. 344; Kleine v.
Catara, 2 Gall. 61. The objections, we have noticed, include all
that were insisted on in the argument.
The objection taken to the absence of an original writ, or to
the supply of a copy, is not tenable. The original writ had ful-
filled its function when the defendant had been brought into
court, and its loss did not affect the action of the plaintiff; and,
it was a matter resting in the discretion of the court, upon ascer-
taining the defective state of the record, to supply the deficiency.
Our conclusion is, there is no error in the record.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice DANIEL dissented.
JOHN G. SHIELDS, APPELLANT, V. ISAAC THOiAS, AND MfARY, HIS
WIFE, NANCY PIRTLE, JOHN B. GOLDSBURY, THOM1AS STARES,
AND ELIZABETH, HIS WIFE, AND JAMES PICKETT, AND ANN, HIS
WIFE.
Where there was an administration upon the estate of an intestate in Kentucky, the
surety in the administration bond and a portion of the distributees residing there,
the court of that place had jurisdiction over the stibject-matter ; and where the prin-
cipal defendant, although residing out of the State, voluntarily appeared and an-
swered a bill filed against him, the jurisdiction of the court was complete, and it had
a right to pass a decree in the premises.
If several claimants of portions of an estate unite in filing a bill, this does not make it
multifarious. The authorities upon thi. subject examined.
VOL. XYII           2:i

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