Burgwyn v. . Hall

13 S.E. 222, 108 N.C. 489
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 13 S.E. 222 (Burgwyn v. . Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgwyn v. . Hall, 13 S.E. 222, 108 N.C. 489 (N.C. 1891).

Opinions

DAVIS, J., and AVERY, J., dissented. *Page 348 The plaintiff brought his action against the defendants, who are nonresidents of this State, to recover damages for an alleged injury to his person, done and procured to be done by them. In the course of the action he obtained an order for their arrest, and they were duly arrested, and, failing to give bail, as allowed by law, they are held in the common jail of the county of Vance, in which county the action was brought. The defendants filed their petition, therein alleging the material facts in the Superior Court of said county, in which the action mentioned is pending, praying that they may be allowed the benefit of the statute (The Code, ch. 27) entitled "Insolvent Debtors." The plaintiff opposes the application of the defendants, denies that they are insolvent, and insists that, inasmuch as it appears that they are nonresidents of this State, and the cause of action on account whereof they are arrested and held is a tort, they are not entitled to the benefits of the statute they invoke.

The court gave judgment denying the application of the defendants to be discharged from custody, and they appealed to this Court. The Constitution (Art. I, sec. 16) provides that "There shall be no imprisonment for debt in this State, except in cases of fraud." The Legislature, observing this provision, has provided by statute (The Code, sec. 291) that in civil actions, founded upon particular causes of action specified, the defendant may, under an order of arrest duly obtained, be arrested and held in custody, unless he shall, as he may do in the way prescribed, give bail "by causing a written (491) undertaking, payable to the plaintiff, to be executed by sufficient surety, to the effect that the defendant shall at all times render himself amenable to the process of the court during the pendency of the action, and to such as may be issued to enforce the judgment therein"; and he may likewise be arrested in execution upon a judgment in the cases specified, as prescribed by the statute (The Code, secs. 442, 447, 448, par. 3); otherwise, parties in civil actions cannot be arrested unless for contempt.

But another statute, entitled "Insolvent Debtors" (The Code, secs. 2942, 2981), provides, generally, that every insolvent debtor may, in the way prescribed, "assign" — surrender — his estate for the benefit of all his creditors, and that his person may thereafter be exempt from arrest or imprisonment on account of any judgment previously rendered or of *Page 349 any debts previously contracted. It would seem that this statute is unnecessary as to honest debtors, because the constitutional provision above recited relieves such debtors from imprisonment. Such surrender of his property by an insolvent debtor for the benefit of his creditors, as to debts and judgments existing before such surrender, would relieve him from possible future annoyance and arrest on account of such debts, although property he might thereafter acquire might be liable to levy and sale to pay the same in proper cases. But the benefits of this chapter are not confined to simply insolvent debtors so designated; such benefits are extended to other classes of persons held in arrest in civil actions. The statute cited (The Code, sec. 2951) prescribes that "the following persons are entitled to the benefits of this chapter:

"1. Every person taken or charged on any order of arrest for default or bail, or on surrender of bail in any action.

"2. Every person taken or charged in execution of arrest for any debt or damages rendered in any action whatever."

It is to be observed that this provision enlarges the general purpose of the statute by extending the same to the classes of persons specified: First, to "every person taken or charged (not yet arrested) on any order of arrest for default of bail"; secondly, to every person (492) whose bail has surrendered him, as allowed by the statute; thirdly, to "every person taken or charged (but not yet taken) in execution of arrest for any debt or damages rendered in any action whatever," as allowed by the statute (The Code, secs. 442, 447, 448, par. 3). The terms — all of them — thus extending the purpose of the statute are as broad and sweeping as they well can be. They do not, in any view of them as to the purpose intended, imply limitation or discrimination. They plainly embrace "every person" taken or charged to be arrested by virtue of "any order of arrest" — not specially for a tort, or for fraud, or other particular cause of action as to which a person may be arrested, but forany cause of action, no matter what may be its nature, if the person is arrested in a case wherein he may lawfully be so. They, in plain, strong terms, embrace any such arrest made or ordered to be made in any action whatever, that is, any action in which a person — a party — may be so arrested. There is a total absence of words or phraseology of limitation or discrimination in the section of the statute just recited, or in the statute, or elsewhere, that confines its benefits to persons so arrested or to be arrested as fraudulent debtors. Nor is there anything in the nature or purpose of the statute that reasonably, much less necessarily, implies such limitation. Its general purpose is to relieve honest insolvent debtors from arrest on account of debts and judgments against them existing at and before the time they make a surrender of their property as prescribed. The purpose of the particular section of the statute under *Page 350 consideration is to relieve a party to an action arrested or presently subject to arrest, or "in execution of arrest for any debt or damage rendered in any action whatever," upon a surrender of his property in the way prescribed. In such case the party arrested and so seeking relief must notify the creditors or plaintiff at whose suit he is arrested, but (493) he may or may not notify other creditors of his application to surrender his property and be discharged from arrest, and only such creditors as may be so notified will be affected by his discharge. The Code, sec. 2955. The principal relief sought in such case by the party arrested is to be discharged from arrest in the action brought by the creditor at whose instance he was arrested. And he is entitled to such discharge upon the honest surrender of his property in the way prescribed, whether the cause of action on account of which he was arrested was a fraudulent debt, or a tort, or of other nature as to which he might be arrested. The statute (The Code, sec. 2952) so expressly provides. It, in broadest terms, embraces "every person taken or charged as in the preceding section (that above described) specified."

It is insisted, however, that the several sections of the statute pertinent to that (section 2951) above recited, mention and refer in terms only to debtors and creditors, and do not in like express terms mention or refer to persons arrested or to be arrested for causes of action other than a fraudulent debt, and, therefore, persons arrested or to be arrested for such other causes of action are not entitled to the benefits of this statute. The terms "debtor and creditor" are employed generally in varying connections throughout the statute to designate the classes of persons to be affected by it, and such terms are not modified so as to make them pertinently and expressly applicable to persons arrested seeking benefit of the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.E. 222, 108 N.C. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgwyn-v-hall-nc-1891.