Boatwright v. Stewart

37 Ark. 614
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 37 Ark. 614 (Boatwright v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boatwright v. Stewart, 37 Ark. 614 (Ark. 1881).

Opinion

English, C. J.

This was a suit upon an attachment bond. The history of the attachment suit, as stated in Mears et al v. Stewart, 31 Ark., 17, is briefly as follows :

On the fourteenth October, 1873', Mears & Boatwright sued George W. Stewart, on an open account, for $215, before a Justice of the Peace of Arkansas county. They filed with the account an affidavit, and Code form, of bond for attachment, which seems to have been issued, and not returned by the constable. On the twenty-seventh of October, 1873, defendant appeai’ed; there was a trial by jury, and verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiffs for $191.25, and defendant appealed to the-Circuit Court. In that court defendant moved to quash the attachment, on the ground of informality of the affidavit on which it was issued by the Justice of the Peace. Plaintiffs filed an amendment to the affidavit, but the court sustained the motion of the defendant, dissolved the attachment, ordered an inquest of damages, which were assessed by'a jury at $240, and rendered judgment upon the verdict. The original cause of action on which the appeal was taken was then tried, and verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of plaintiffs (sixth April, 1875,) for $125. The plaintiffs brought error to the judgment against them for damages, and this court reversed it, because there was no Statute in force at the time the judgment was rendered, authorizing the damages of the defendant to be assessed in the attachment suit, on the dissolution of the attachment. The court said that if the attachment was wrongfully sued out, and defendant damaged thereby,' he had the right to resort to a common law action, or a suit upon the Code bond to recover damages.

The present action upon the attachment bond was commenced in the Circuit Court of Arkansas county, on the seventeenth of November, 1879, by George W. Stewart, the defendant in the attachment suit, against Green W. Boat-wright, one of the principals in the bond, and Henry Young, the surety.

The complaint alleges, in substance, that on the fourteenth of October, 1873, Mears & Boatwright commenced an action by attachment against plaintiff, before W. E. Newton, a Justice of the Peace, etc. That in accordance with law, they executed a bond, with Henry Young as surety, conditioned that they would pay this plaintiff all damages he might sustain by reason of the action if the order of attachment was wrongfully obtained ; which bond is set out as follows :

“We undertake and are bound to defendant for all damages he may sustain by reason of this action, if the order therefor is wrongfully obtained.”

Plaintiff further alleges that after Mears & Boatwright “had filed the affidavit as required by law, and given the bond, of which the foregoing is a true copy,” an attachment was issued by said justice, directed to the constable, etc., who levied it upon three thousand pounds of seed cotton, fifteen acres of cotton in the field, and a bay horse, the property of the plaintiff.

That the suit was tried before the justice on the thirtieth of October, 1873, and judgment rendered against this plaintiff, from which he prayed and obtained an appeal, in accordance with, and within the time prescribed by law.

“That said Justice of the Peace ordered the property attached to be sold, on account of its liability to waste, and that the proceeds be held subject to the final disposition of the case.”

That “on the trial of said case” in the Circuit Court, at the spring term, 1875, on appeal, the attachment was set aside, dissolved and held for naught, and judgment was rendered for this plaintiff for $240, as damages he had sustained by reason of the issuance of said attachment; from which judgment Hears & Boatwright “took an appeal to the Supreme Court,” and at its May term, 1876, the judgment was reversed, the court deciding that there was no-law at that time authorizing a writ of inquiry to assess damages, and that suit should have been brought on the attachment bond,.

Plaintiff further alleges that after Hears & Boatright had “taken an appeal,” and given a supersedeas bond, they obtained an order from the Circuit Court requiring the constable to pay over to them the proceeds of the sale of the-property attached, and that the same were paid to them,, and no part thereof has been paid to plaintiff.

That plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $700.00,, b}^ reason of said suit, and the wrongful suing out of said attachment, and neither Hears & Boatright, nor Henry Young, had paid plaintiff said damages, and thatMears had become a non-resident; wherefore, he prayed judgment, against defendants Boatright and Young for $700.00.

After demurrer to the complaint had been interposed, and overruled, defendants filed an answer with two paragraphs. In the first they denied that said order of attachment was wrongfully obtained ; and, in the second, they alleged that the said supposed cause of action, in the complaint mentioned, did not accrue .to plaintiff at any time within five-years next before the commencement of the suit.

The issues were submitted to a jury, and, upon the evidence and instructions of the court, hereafter noticed, a verdict was returned, and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff for $500.00 damages ; a motion for a new trial was overruled, bill of exceptions taken, and defendants appealed to this court.-

I. The court charged the jury, against the objections of appellants, that all of the material allegations and state-merits of the complaint, not denied by their answer, were admitted to be true.

The giving of this instruction was not made a ground of the motion for a new trial; but, it may be remarked, that the Code rule is, that “every material allegation of the complaint, not specifically controverted by the answer, etc., etc., must, for the purpose of the action, be'taken as true. * * * Allegations of value, or of amount of damage, shall not be considered as true by the failure to controvert them.” Gantt’s Dig., Sec. 4608,

. II. In the second, third and sixth instructions, moved for ajopellee, and given, against the objection of appellants, the court charged the jury, in effect, that if the action on the bond was commenced within five years from the time of the dissolution of the attachment, it was not barred by the Statute of Limitation.

Appellee read in evidence, from the record, the order dissolving the attachment, which was made at the March term (perhaps the sixth of April), 1875, not “on the trial of the case,” as alleged in the complaint, but on his motion. This suit was commenced, seventeenth of November, 1879, hence five years had not transpired between the dissolution *of the attachment and the bringing of this action, and it was not barred by the Statute of Limitation.

1. ATTACHMENTS : Measure-of damages forWrongf u suing out-III. The fifth instruction moved for appellee, and given by the court, against the objection of appellants, was that: “ The measure of damages in an action of this nature, is the value of the propei’ty at the time of the seizure of the same under the order of attachment.”

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ark. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boatwright-v-stewart-ark-1881.