Babcock v. Cook

20 N.W. 689, 55 Mich. 1, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 424
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 N.W. 689 (Babcock v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Babcock v. Cook, 20 N.W. 689, 55 Mich. 1, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 424 (Mich. 1884).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

This action was brought under tbe log-lien law of this State, enacted by the Legislature in 1881. See 2 How. Stat. §§ 8412-8427. Twenty-six claimants seek to unite their claims and maintain the suit in the name of one, the present plaintiff.

Statements of lien, made by the several claimants, were filed in the clerk’s office in the county of Newaygo, on the 22d day of February, 1883, and the affidavit for attachment on the 13th day of April following. On filing the [2]*2affidavit a writ of attachment was issued and served on the 17th and 19th days of April, and on the 25th day of April thereafter the defendant Cook was permitted to appear as part owner of the logs and defend the suit in pursuance of the thirteenth section of the act, and on the same day he entered a motion to quash the writ of attachment and dismiss the proceedings in the case.

The following are copies of the affidavit and ‘the writ issued thereon :

"State of Michigan, County of Newaygo — ssLewis Bab.-' cock, of said county, being duly sworn, says that David P. Kimball, -the defendant in the annexed writ, is indebted to Lewis Babcock, the plaintiff named in the said writ, in the sum of eight hundred and eighty and sixty-one one-hundredths dollars ($880.61), for the work of affiant, and also for the work of William E. Letson, Alexander Fossback, Benjamin H. Kimball, Anders Nyland, Angus McLaren, John McLaren, Abel A. David, Thomas Bennett, Leander Anderson, Hen rig Nisula, Yalentine Lentinen, Alexander Sjogren, Eric Anderson, Matts Ericson, Henry Decker, Galen Northrop, John Cheseman, Andrew Lind, Michael Matson, Jacob Jacobson, John Hoagland, Matt Matson, John Junell, Lorenzo Y. Let-son and Frank Johnson,, whose agent and attorney he is for the collection of their claims, as near as may be, over and above all legal set-offs, and the same is now due for work and labor performed by affiant, and by each and every one of the above-named parties in cutting, hauling, banking, swamping, working on railways, skidding, making roads for hauling, loading, working as chore-boy around shanties, etc., making sleighs and doing carpenter work around shanties, logging job for said Kimball, the property mentioned in the annexed writ; that the last day’s work of said labor was performed on or about the 13th day of February, 1883, and that said labor, for each and every person named in this affidavit, was done and performed by them between the first day of October, 1882, and the said 13th day of February, 1883; and that the said property described in the annexed writ, or a portion of it, is now situated in the county of Newaygo, State of Michigan, and that a statement of lien, setting forth the labor performed by each and every person above-named, required by law, was on the 22d day of February, 1883, duly filed with the clerk of the county of Newaygo, aforesaid, where said labor was performed, showing the kind of labor done, and [3]*3tlie amount due and to each person named above,for said work and labor for said Kimball, on the said logs and property to which he refers.
Lewis Babcock. •
Subscribed and sworn to before me, April 13, 1883.
Kate E. Robinson, Notary Public, Newaygo Co., Mich.”
WRIT OE ATTACHMENT:
“ In the name of the People of the State of Michigan — ■ To the Sheriff of the County of Newaygo, greeting :We command you to attach the following goods and chattels, to-wit, a quantity of pine saw-logs bearing various marks, thus, to-wit, two 00”s on some and a cross on others, thus “ O 0 ” “ now on Cook’s or Staples & Covell’s rollways, so called, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy the sum of eight hundred and eighty and sixty-one one-hundredths dollars ($880.61), with interest, costs, disbursements, charges, and expenses of suit, in whosesoever possession the same may be found, and safely keep the same to satisfy any judgment, interest, costs, disbursements, charges and expenses that may be recovered under and by virtue of the issuing of this writ, and also summon David P. Kimball, defendant, if he be found in this State, to appear before the circuit court of Newaygo county, at the village of Newaygo, in said county of Newaygo, op the first day of May, 1883, to answer Lewis Babcock, to his damage one thousand dollars; and in case the above-named defendant is not the owner of said described logs, timber, posts, ties, poles, bark, bolts or staves, you are then also commanded to serve or cause to be served a copy of this writ, on or before the return-day above mentioned, upon the owner of said logs, timber, posts, ties, poles, bark, bolts or staves, or his proper agent or attorney, if such agent or attorney be known to you and residing in. this State.
Witness the Honorable Ceylon C. Puller, circuit judge, and the seal of the said circuit court, at the village and county of Newaygo, aforesaid, this 13th day of April, 1883.
[Seal.] Seth S. Watrous, Clerk.”

The motion of defendant’s counsel to quash and dismiss was based upon the following objections:

“First. It is not alleged in the affidavit upon which the writ of attachment in said cause was issued, that the parties named therein as claimants have united their claims.
Second. It is not alleged in said affidavit that the parties named therein as claimants have designated the plaintiff as [4]*4their agent or attorney for prosecuting the lien claimed by each or any suit necessary to enforce the same.
Third. The amount claimed to be due each person named in said affidavit as claimant is not alleged therein.
Fourth. It is not alleged in said affidavit that the sums claimed to be due the several persons respectively named in said affidavit as claimants is less than one hundred dollars each.
Fifth. The pai-ticular kind of labor or work claimed to have been done by the different persons named in said affidavit as claimants is not alleged therein.
Sixth. It is not alleged in said affidavit that the logs upon which the labor of the several claimants is claimed to have been done, were not to be run down the Manistee river or the waters tributary thereto.
Seventh. It is not alleged in said affidavit whether the work claimed to have been done was done for the owner of the logs sought to be attached, or for a contractor or sub-contractor, nor for whom it was done.
Eighth. There is no allegation in said affidavit as to who is the owner of the logs upon which the work is claimed to have been done and upon which attachment is sought.
Ninth. The writ of attachment issued in this cause is void, because it directs the officer to serve copy of same upon the owner of the property to be attached, his agent or attorney, without giving the name of such owner.
Tenth. The service of the writ of attachment in this cause by the sheriff upon an officer of the boom company and upon other persons, as owners, is cumulative, contradictory, illegal and void.
Eleventh.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.W. 689, 55 Mich. 1, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babcock-v-cook-mich-1884.