Davies v. Scott

2 Miles 52
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedDecember 31, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Miles 52 (Davies v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davies v. Scott, 2 Miles 52 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1836).

Opinion

[55]*55The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Stroüd, J.

The two rules taken in this case bear such a relation.to each other, that counsel have not thought a distinct discussion of them necessary. And we will dispose of them together. The writ of attachment is prescribed in the 35th section of the act of last session, relating to executions. It is a new provision in the law, and some doubt has been expressed whether it is to be considered as an execution or a species of original process.

We regard it in the light of an execution. And so far as respects the questions raised in the argument before us, whatever rule of law would apply to a fieri facias, will apply with equal fitness to the writ of attachment.

In this particular, the views of the defendant’s counsel coincide with what I have just expressed, and he has accordingly urged, as a reason for setting aside the service of the attachment, the principle recognised in Young v. Taylor, 2 Binneij 218, that where a plaintiff levies a fieri facias upon the estate of the defendant, and whilst this is in force, charges him in execution upon a capias ad satisfaciendum founded on the same judgment, an option is cast upon the defendant to set aside the service of one or the other of these writs at his pleasure.

As a general proposition, it is conceded, that such is the law. But it is equally certain, that the ground of this rule is the supposed oppression of the defendant by the concurrent exercise on the part of the plaintiff of the two kinds of judicial process, both tending to the same end. A more flagrant abuse of the process of the court, if done by the express direction of the plaintiff', could not be imagined. To deserve this character, however, the plaintiff' must be the efficient cause of the abuse, and the defendant a constrained and involuntary sufferer. But, according to the return of the sheriff, the relation of the parties to the execution of the capias ad satisfaciendum in the present case was the reverse of this hypothesis. The plaintiff countermands the capias ad satisfaciendum—the sheriff’s deputy to whom its execution had been committed, and in whose custody it was from its delivery till after the return day, purposely abstains from executing it—serves, in fact, the attachment on the defendant, personally, without attempting to arrest him on the capias ad satisfaciendum—a neglect, in itself, equivalent to an escape, if the writ had not been countermanded previously—and after this [56]*56service, and of course with a fuli knowledge of it, the defendant of his own accord, unwarned and uninvited by the sheriff, goes to the sheriff’s office, in the absence of the deputy having the capias ad satisfaciendum in his possession, and induces another officer, ignorant of the countermand, whose accustomed duties were not those of a bailiff, to accompany him, as if in custody under the capias ad satisfaciendum, to the prothonotary’s office, where the usual formal discharge under the insolvent law is immediately procured. Upon this statement, to regard the plaintiff as an aggressor, and the defendant the victim of oppression, would be a gross perversion of language. And as nothing tends more certainly to bring the administration of justice into contempt than to permit a meritorious party to be put in the wrong by the fraudulent contrivance of his adversary, we have no hesitation in refusing the defendant’s application to set the service of the attachment aside.

This conclusion, in effect, decides the rule on the part of the plaintiff to set aside the service of the capias ad satisfaciendum. It is manifest that this service, as it is termed, would not have taken place, if the proper officer had not been absent when the defendant called at the sheriff’s office. The book-keeper, not having the writ, it is not easy to see how he could arrest the defendant; and according to the return, he certainly did not. Being ignorant of the countermand of the writ and unacquainted with the proper duties of a bailiff’, he was induced to yield to the defendant’s solicitation and inform the prothonotary that he was under arrest. The whole was the result of a purposed imposition of the defendant, and is subject therefore to the general rule which attaches to every species of fraud. The service of the capias ad satisfaciendum, is accordingly set aside.

Another branch of the defendant’s application is to quash the writ of attachment. The issuing of the fieri facias and capias ad satisfaciendum, constituted, it is said, an election by the plaintiff, which barred a resort afterwards to the attachment.

This deduction, it is argued, is warranted by the 20th section of the execution act. As this is but a proviso to the 19th section, to be intelligible, the two must be taken together. They read thus: Sect. XIX. “ The plaintiff in any judgment which shall be obtained, <&c., for the recovery of money, may have execution thereof, subject to the restrictions and qualifications herein pro[57]*57vided, against the person and estate of the defendant in the following order, to wit: I. Upon the personal estate of the defendant. II. Upon his real estate. III. If he have neither personal nor real estate, liable to execution, then upon the person of the defendant. Sect. XX. Provided, That it shall be lawful for the plaintiff to have execution against the real estate of the defendant, or against his person, in the manner hitherto allowed, or at his election he may proceed to obtain the satisfaction of his judgment out of such personal estate as is by this act now first made liable to execution.”

The election here mentioned is a privilege of the plaintiff irrespective of the defendant’s wishes. It is a dispensation of the rigour of the 19th section, which exacts a levy on the entire personal estate, before recourse can be had to the real estate or the person of the defendant molested. But as by a subsequent section of the same statute, a certain description of personal property cannot be made available to the plaintiff but by the very uncertain and dilatory proceeding of attachment, it is not made compulsory on him to prosecute this writ, but he is permitted to levy on real estate when this can be found, or in defect of this, may direct a capias ad satisfaciendum against the defendant’s person. Of what importance, then, is it to the defendant, that the plaintiff, who on general principles, is restrained from the execution of more than one judicial writ, should be debarred from using the attachment from the mere fact, that shortly before, he had directed a capias ad satisfaciendum to be issued 1 To permit the plaintiff to abandon the capias ad satisfaciendum, is to protect the defendant’s person—the grand object of the 19th section, which is but a fresh affirmation of the cherished policy of the commonwéalth for at least a quarter of a century. Practically, therefore, the construction contended for, would conflict with the very spirit of this part of the act,—might, in many instances, be injurious to the plaintiff, and could in no case, in a just sense, be advantageous to the defendant.

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Related

Shonk v. Dungan
86 Pa. D. & C. 294 (Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, 1953)
Dobbin v. Allegheny
7 F. Cas. 779 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania, 1860)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Miles 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-v-scott-pactcomplphilad-1836.