Cunningham & Son v. Baker, Peterson & Co.

104 Ala. 160
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 104 Ala. 160 (Cunningham & Son v. Baker, Peterson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cunningham & Son v. Baker, Peterson & Co., 104 Ala. 160 (Ala. 1893).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

The levy of the attachment was made only by the service of a garnishment. The judgment of the court below, from which the appeal is taken, was rendered, sustaining or overruling demurrers the parties interposed. From these rulings, the counsel have evolved, as the principal question of the case, to which they have directed argument, the liability to garnishment of the moneys or effects, in the possession of the garnishee, the attaching creditor seeks to reach and condemn.

The nature and office of a garnishment is defined and and declared by the Code, in these words : “A garnishment, as the word is employed in this Code, is process to reach and subject money or effects of a defendant in attachment, or in a judgment or decree, or in a pending suit commenced in tlie ordinary form, in the possession or under the control of a third person, or debts owing such defendant, or .liabilities to him on contracts for the delivery of personal property, or on contracts for the payment of money which may be discharged by the delivery of personal property, or on contract payable in personal property ; and. such third person is. called the garnishee.” — Code, § 2994. This section of the Code is but the expression of the nature of a garishment, as [168]*168it had been defined and declared, in effect, by a long course of judicial-decisions. It is obvious that under the statute, and under prior judicial decisions, a garnishment has a dual office. The one is, and the one in which it is more usually employed, the subjection of a debt, or of a demand originating in contract, or moneys coming rightfully and legally into the possession of the garnishee, which it is a legal duty to pay to the debtor of the creditor suing out the garnishment. The other is, the subjection of moneys or effects in the possession or under the control of the garnishee, which it is a legal duty to deliver to the debtor. With the exception of cases of conveyances, or transfers, or agreements, made to defraud creditors, a garnishment cannot be employed to reach or subject any debt, or any demand, the debtor suing in his own name cannot recover in an action ex contractu, or, as it is generally stated, in “an action of debt, or indebitatus assumpsit.” — 1 Brick. Dig. 175, §§ 314, et seq. And prior to the adoption of the present Code, the debt or demand, must have been payable or solvable in money only. — 1 Brick. Dig. 176, § 320; Jones v. Crews, 64 Ala. 368. The Code, (Sections 2945-46), enlarges the debts or demands which may be reached by garnishment. Not only debts or demands payable or solvable in money, but a liability “on a contract for the delivery of personal property, or for the payment of money which maybe discharged by the delivery of personal property, or on a contract payable in personal property, ” is within the scope of the remedy. The liability must originate in and be dependent on contract. This remains as essentially the controlling element and characteristic of the remedy, as it was when debts or demands payable or solvable in money only were within its scope, if either of the several contracts to -which the remedy is extended is broken, when the facts are ascertained, the law fixes the measure of damages, the value of the property at the time it should have been delivered or paid, with the interest on such value from that time. An unliquidated demand having in it no element of contract, or unliquidated damages, or the right of action for a tort, is not the subject of garnishment. — 1-Freeman on Executions, § 167, and .authorities cited.

The moneys and effects of the defendants in attachment, in the possession of the garnishee, were obtained [169]*169from the defendants by talcing them into custody, imprisoning them, and making search of their persons and trunks. The arrest, imprisonment and search were without warrant; without any reason to believe that the defendants, or either of them, had committed, or intended the commission of, any offense against the law of this State. The only inducement, or moving cause for it, vouched by the garnishee, was a telegram adressed to him as chief of police of the city of Montgomery, by the chief of police of the city of New Orleans, requesting that he see the conductor of an approaching railroad train, “and keep track of Baker and Peterson, swindling commission merchants.” The statute authorizes the policemen of an incorporated city or town, within the. limits of the county, with or without warrant, to make arrests in all cases in which the sheriff is authorized to make them. — Cr. Code, § 4260.

As a general rule, at common law an arrest could not be made without warrant. If a felony was committed, or a breach of the peace threatened or committed, within the view of an officer authorized to arrest, it was his duty to arrest without warrant, and carry the offender before a magistrate. Or, if a felony had been committed, and there was probable cause to believe a particular person was the offender, he could be arrested without warrant. — Halley v. Mix, 3 Wend. 350, s. c. 20 Am. Dec. 702 ; Burns v. Erben, 40 N. Y. 463. The matter of arrests is now the subject of statutory regulation, largely affirmatory of the rules of the common law.— Or. Code, §§ 4260-4274. The statutes, and the corresponding rules of the common law, have primary, if not exclusive, relation to the administration of the criminal laws of the State. If an arrest be legal, under what conditions, and for what purposes, there may be a search of the person arrested, and what things found upon his person may be taken into possession by the officer making the arrest, was the subject of very full and deliberate examination and exposition in Ex parte Hurn, 92 Ala. 102. A repetition of what is there said is not now necessary. A search of the person arrested. is j ustifiable only as an incident to"_,a lawful arrest; if the arrest be unlawful, thp search is unlawful, and is aggravated by the illegality of the arrest.

If a person charged with treason, felony, or other [170]*170crime, in another State, has fled therefrom, and is found in this State, the statutes provide for his apprehension and detention to await a requisition from the Executive of the State in which the crime was committed. — Or. Code, §§ 4747-4760. Under these statutes, a warrant of arrest must issue from a magistrate having authority to issue such warrants. In the absence of statutes, upon common law principles, the apprehension and detention of persons charged with crime in other States, was effected through judicial officers, upon probable cause being shown by appropriate evidence. — Morrell v. Quarles, 35 Ala. 544; 1 Kent Com., 36 — 37. The intervention of a judicial officer and a warrant of arrest were deemed the more orderly, if not the only course of legal procedure. The current of- judicial decision supports the proposition that when the matter of apprehension and detention is regulated by statute, the statutory mode of procedure must be observed, and that arrest and detention otherwise is illegal. — Malcolmson v. Scott, 56 Mich. 459 ; State v. Shelton, 79 N. C. 605; Ex parte Cubreth, 49 Cal. 435 ; Ex parte Thornton, 9 Texas, 635; Matter of Heyward, 1 Sandf. Sup. Ct. (N. Y.) 702; Matter of Leland, 7 Abbott Pr. Rep. (N. S.) 64; Matter of Rutter, Ib. 67.

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Bluebook (online)
104 Ala. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-son-v-baker-peterson-co-ala-1893.