Chapman v. Reddick

41 Fla. 120
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 41 Fla. 120 (Chapman v. Reddick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. Reddick, 41 Fla. 120 (Fla. 1899).

Opinion

Carter, J.:

On July 22, 1889, defendant in error began an action against plaintiff in error in the Circuit Court of Sumter county, to recover damages for defendant’s failure and refusal to levy and collect an execution. The defendant filed a demurrer to the declaration which was overruled, and thereafter several pleas to the declaration to which demurrers were sustained, and having failed to file other pleas within the time allowed by the court, a default was entered against him on the rule day in October, 1892. Thereafter plaintiff’s damages were assessed by a jury at $300, and on the same day, March 6, 1894, judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff for said sum, from which defendant sued out this writ of error.

We shall not attempt to give the pleadings in full, but confine ourselves to a brief statement of the facts alleged upon which errors are assigned in this court. It appears from the declaration that on November 21, 1887, in a suit instituted by defendant in error against one William Edgar in the Circuit Court of Hernando county, then in the Sixth Judicial Circuit, a writ of attachment was issued addressed to the sheriff of Sumter county (Sumter county being then in the Fifth Judicial Circuit), commanding him to attach and take into his custody and control so much of the lands, tenements, goods and chattels of said William Edgar as would be sufficient to satisfy John M. Reddick (the plaintiff), in a debt of $231.05 with costs of suit, and requiring him to have same before the judge of the Circuit Court for Hernando county at the court house in Brooksville on December 5, 1887, together with the writ. This writ duly came to the hands of plaintiff in error as sheriff of Sum[123]*123ter county, and on November 25, 1887, he levied same upon an engine and boiler and certain other goods and chattels in Sumter county, endorsing a return of his levy upon the writ. On February 5, 1889, judgment was. recovered by Reddick against Edgar in the suit pending in Hernando county for $250.88 and costs, upon which execution issued May 18, 1889, in ordinary form addressed to all and singular the sheriffs of the State. This execution duly came to the hands of plaintiff in error and the present action was instituted to recover dafnages for his alleged failure and refusal to levy same upon the attached property and collect by sale thereof.

One of the pleas filed by defendant, omitting formal parts was as follows: “That after the levy of the writ of attachment upon the property of said William Edgar as in plaintiff’s declaration alleged, the said property being ponderous and difficult of removal by defendant, and being situated a considerable distance from the residence of the defendant, to-wit: about fifteen miles, the defendant put the same in the care and charge of one W. W. Hammack, of whose probity and diligence in the premises defendant was well satisfied, but that by some means and by some person or persons unknown to defendant the said property was removed between the time of the levy of said attachment and the coming into defendant’s hands of the fieri facias in plaintiff’s declaration mentioned, to some place unknown to defendant, and the whereabouts of which said property is still unknown to defendant; that more than a year elapsed from the levy of the said writ of attachment to the coming into defendant’s hands of the said writ of fieri facias.’"’

The plaintiff in error confines his argument in this court to his assignments of error based upon the rulings upon defendant’s demurrer to the declaration, and plain[124]*124tiff’s demurrer to defendant’s plea which we have just quoted. The only point of law noted for argument upon the margin of the- demurrer to the declaration is that the statute authorizing the issuance of the writ of attachment is unconstitutional, and therefore void. Perhaps the constitutional question does not properly arise upon the demurrer to' the declaration, but it does arise upon the demurrer to the plea. We shall therefore proceed to consider the constitutional question, and then the merits of-the plea as a defense.

I. The first, second and fourth sections of Chapter 3721, laws approved May 19, 1887, entitled “An act to provide for the issuing and service of writs, process and notices in civil suits and proceedings at law in certain cases,” provide as follows:

Section 1. That hereafter when in any civil suit or proceeding at law in any of the courts of this State, for any purpose whatever, the defendant, defendants, or any one of them therein, resides or is in any county of this State other, than the one in which said suit or proceeding is commenced or is pending, any writ, writs, process or notices as authorized by law in civil suits or proceedings, when the defendant or defendants reside in the county where the suit or proceeding is commenced, shall be issued and appropriately directed, and the sheriff or other proper officer of said county in which said defendant, defendants or any one of them resides or may be found, shall execute and serve such writs, process or notices; and return thereof shall be made to the court from which the same emanated, and such execution or service and return shall be valid to all intents and purposes, and the defendant or defendants so served legally bound thereby; provided, however, that before any writ, process or notice shall issue by virtue of this section, [125]*125the plaintiff, or some one in his behalf, shall make affidavit before some officer of this State authorized to administer oaths that said suit or proceeding is, or was, instituted in good faith and with no' intention on the part of the plaintiff or plaintiffs, as the case may be, to annoy or defraud said defendant or defendants.

Section 2. That hereafter, when in any proceedings in attachment in any of the courts of this State, the plaintiff, or some one in his behalf, shall, in addition to the affidavit now required in attachment proceedings, make affidavit that the defendant or defendants, or any one of them, has real or personal property in some county of this State other than the one in which said proceedings were instituted, a writ of attachment, original or ancillary, as the case may be, shall be issued and directed to the sheriff or other proper officer of said county where said property is, as aforesaid; and said officer shall execute said writ and hold the property levied on by virtue thereof subject to the order of the court from which said writ emanated, which said court shall have the power to order the delivery thereof to the sheriff or other propr officer of the county where the said proceedings were instituted, or order said officer so executing the writ to hold and dispose of the same in • his county according to law, as in other cases. And when any real property is levied upon by virtue of this section, it. shall be the duty of the officer levying said writ to file a written notice of said levy with the clerk of the Circuit Court for the county in which said property is situated, which notice shall contain a description of the property so levied upon, and the clerk shall record said notice in the book kept for the record of foreign judgments, for which he shall receive a fee of twenty-five cents, and said record shall be notice to all persons of said levy; and in [126]*126case of the dissolution of the attachment, or dismissal of the suit, or if for any cause the property ceases to be bound by said attachment, upon due proof thereof the clerk shall note such fact on the record of the levy. •

Section 4.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Fla. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-reddick-fla-1899.