Childress v. Fowler

4 Ark. 159
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1848
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ark. 159 (Childress v. Fowler) 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
Childress v. Fowler, 4 Ark. 159 (Ark. 1848).

Opinion

Scott-, J.

The only question presented by the record is, whether or not the court below erred in striking out the several pleas in abatement filed by the defendant below, after the execution of his bond under the provisions of the 13th section of the Statute of Attachments, and the consequent release of the property attached. And as the record presents no other apparent reason for the action of the court below, on the plaintiff’s motion to strike out these pleas in abatement, than the apparently supposed legal effect of the execution oí this bond upon the defendant’s right to file dilatory pleas, we will examine somewhat at large so much of the Statute of Attachments as seems- connected with the solution of the question before us.

In the case of Delano et al. vs. Kennedy, reported in 5 Ark. 457, the principle involved was decided by this court, but as there was a dissenting opinion in that case by an eminent jurist, and the correctness of the decision of the majority of the court has been strongly questioned, it will not be inappropriate to review the doctrines of that case, which will necessarily be done in presenting our views on the question now to be decided.

The proceeding authorized by the Statute of Attachments, chap. 13 of the Revised Statutes, is, in its inception, a compound proceeding, combining a proceeding in rem with a proceeding in personam, each having a distinct identity, but liable to be transformed, at any time before final judgment, into a proceeding solely in personam. And as a whole is founded upon the declaration, bond, affidavit and writ in harmonious combination. Should this foundation be defective, as it would be in case the affidavit, the bond, or the writ should not be in conformity with the statute, or either should vary, the one from the other, in so much as to disturb the harmony of the whole as one suit, the entire proceedings, if appropriately assailed, would necessarily fail, because being unknown to the common law and a mere creation of the statute with prescribed pre-requisites and fixed limits, it must necessarily stand or fall upon its conformity or non-conformity with the terms upon which, by the statute, it is permitted to be set on foot and have its being. Harsh and effective in its operation and so easily perverted to purposes of oppression, the legislature have wisely attempted to restrain its potency within its legitimate sphere of action, by requiring as a pre-requisite, a prescribed affidavit under the pains and penalties of perjury, and an ample bond, with security for the indemnification of the defendant, to be delivered over to him for suit, by order of court, whenever it shall be shown that the debt or demand, proceeded for by the plaintiff, was not really due, or it shall appear that the writ was not “ issued in accordance with the true intent and meaning of the statute.” Secs. 3, 5,50.

The original of this extraordinary remedy (so often held by all, or most of the American courts to demand a strict construetion in furtherance of the views of the legislature in placing these unusual restraints upon its use, and in confining it, thus trammeled, to specified cases only,) is to be found among the immemorial custioms of the city of London, designated as the “ Custom of Foreign Attachments,” an account of which is given in Bacon’s Abridgement and in other old books. And it will be found that, although our statute has, in establishing the substance of this ancient custom, introduced several modifications, it has at the same time preserved all its strong and distinguishing features. One of) these modifications is the introduction of a new rule, less onerous upon the defendant, for making resistance to these proceedings; and another, is a restriction as to the time when the attachment may be dissolved. And both of these modifications are effected by the provisions of the 15th and 29th sections of our statute. By the “ Custom,” a defendant could not, in any case, make defence without first giving bail to the action: by the 29th section, as well as by the 15th, he is allowed to do so without bail. So by the Custom, the defendant could, at any time within a year and a day, appear, put in bail to the action, even although after judgment and execution against the garnishee, (if at that time satisfaction had not been entered of record,) and by this means dissolve the attachment, and thus authorize the defendant or garnishee, as the case might be, to have (rover or replevin for the goods attached, if they were not forthwith delivered. But by section 29 he can only dissolve the attachment, as to time, “before judgment entered or jury empanneled,” not afterwards; and as to means, he is allowed to effect this dissolution by successful exceptions to the affidavit, provided he will first “ appear and plead to the plaintiff’s action.” Thus by the 29th section the defendant is allowed, not only to appear and make his defence without bail, as he is also allowed to do by the 15th section, but he is authorized to set up abateable matter (by objection to the affidavit) in an extraordinary manner (by exceptions) instead of in the ordinary manner, by plea in abatement. And thus it is plainly intended to confer upon him extraordinary means for putting an end to so much of the proceedings, as is a proceeding in rent, leaving the entire proceedings themselves to be overthrown only by the ordinary means allowed and used for the overthrow of “ other suits at law,” as authorized by the 15th section. And contemplated that this extraordinary means will be used only in that condition of the case in its progress through the court, when, by the rules of law, dilatory pleas could be no longer made available. And designing that when by default of the defendant, the case was in this condition, he might then, upon the terms of pleading to the merits, still have the privilege of abating, by means of successful exceptions to the affidavit, the attachment only, for an objection, which, if taken in time by plea in abatement, would have overthrown the entire suit. This is evident from the consideration that, by the 15th section the defendant, without giving bail, has the right secured to him of pleading to, and defending the compound proceeding “ as any other suit at law,” and that it could not have been designed by the 29th section to impair this right. Moreover, to apply the principles of strict construction, which are usually applied to remedies derogatory to the common law, to provisions of the statute for resistance to this class of remedies would be felo de se, and an utter perversion of this conservative doctrine. And inasmuch as proceedings under the statute of attachments, for all purposes perhaps, and certainly for all purposes connected with resistance to their progress through the courts, cannot bo considered in any other light than in that of suits or actions at law, set on foot by the legislature, not in a condition of isolation, but directly in view of, and in harmonious combination with our entire system of jurisprudence as a whole, of which it was itself to form a part; necessarily, like all other remedies, its want of propriety or efficiency must be made to appear in the regular established course of pleading-applicable to all other actions at law, unless in points where the statute, which gave it existence, otherwise provides. It is safe then to conclude that the legislature designed by section 29 to confer benefit upon the defendant, and not impair or take from him privileges and rights, which had been conferred upon him either by the previous sections of the statute, or by its necessary connexion with the general law of the land.

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Related

Gibson v. Gibson
15 Mass. 106 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1818)
Delano v. Kennedy
5 Ark. 457 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1844)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ark. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childress-v-fowler-ark-1848.