E. Simpson & Co. v. Knight & Frasier

12 Fla. 144
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 Fla. 144 (E. Simpson & Co. v. Knight & Frasier) 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
E. Simpson & Co. v. Knight & Frasier, 12 Fla. 144 (Fla. 1867).

Opinion

BAKER, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This suit was commenced, by attachment in the Circuit Court for Columbia county, in the Suwannee Circuit.

The record shows that the affidavit was sworn to by J. J. Einley, the attorney for Elias Simpson & Charles Johnston, merchants and partners doing business in the city of New York, under the name and style of E. Simpson & Co., and filed on the 1st day of February, 1867. On the same day the attachment bond was filed, signed by the said J. J. Finley, R. T. Gist and A. A. Ochus, and was approved by the Clerk of the Court. Upon the filing of said affidavit and bond, an attachment was issued and levied upon the goods and chattels of Knight & Frasier, the appellees. The return of the Sheriff shows that the levy was made on the 2d day of February.

The attorneys for defendants gave notice that on the 16 th day of March, they would make a motion, before the Hon. T. T. Long, to “ dismiss and dissolve the attachment

1st. Because no bond has been properly signed and delivered, as the law required.

2d. That no service of process ever has been made.

[146]*1468d. Because there is no praecipe sued out authorizing the issue of writs of attachment.

4. Because the affidavit is incomplete.

The court, after hearing the argument of counsel on said motion, “ ordered and adjudged that the said motion be sustained ; that the said writ of attachment be dissolved, and that the suit be dismissed.”

The errors assigned are four in number, alleging that the court erred in dissolving the attachment and dismissing the suit upon the exceptions upon which the motion was based. It does not appear from judgment of the court whether all the exceptions taken were sustained, or only a part; it is therefore necessary that all should now be considered.

In the exception taken to the affidavit, it is not shown in what part it is alleged to be “ incomplete.” Upon examination the affidavit is found to be drawn with the usual professional skill, setting forth all the allegations necessary to sus? tain an attachment suit, and is sworn to by the attorney for plaintiffs, and inasmuch as the point was not pressed in the argument before this, court, we presume it was not relied upon, or wholly abandoned.

The exception taken to the execution of the bond was-strongly urged by the counsel for appellees. They insist that the bond could not be legally executed by J. J. Finley* in his capacity of an attorney at law; that the bond required by the statute must be executed by the plaintiff or by his attorney in fact, and to maintain this position rely on the act which provides that no attachment shall issue until the party applying for the same, shall, by himself or by his agent or attorney, enter into bond with at least two good and sufficient securities. Thomp. Dig., 368.

In the case of Conklin & Smith vs. Goldsmith, 5 Fla., 280, the questions arising under this statute were fully discussed. The peculiar phraseology used makes its construction difficult. The court, however, after a careful examina[147]*147tion arrived at a conclusion and gave a definition of the act which has been received and acquiesced in by the legal profession as well as the legislature, for many years, as the law of the State, and nothing has been presented in the argument on this case to induce this court to overrule that decision. Mr. Justice Semmes who delivered the opinion of the court, said: The main object of that part of the statute was to protect the debtor from an improper use of the remedy, by requring two good and sufficient securities to the bond. This object can as well be accomplished when the agent executes the bond in his own name as in the name of his principal.”

In the case before us, an attorney-at-law executes the bond, and binds himself that he may obtain the writ of attachment for the benefit of his client. Since it has been settled that an agent can sue out a writ of attachment for his principal, by executing the bond in his own name, it seems easy to arrive at the conclusion that the statute confers equal authority upon an attorney-at-law. The reasoning of the court in the above stated case is based in part upon the use of the woi’d attorney in the statute in contra-distinction to the word agent, it being the duty of the court to construe the law if possible, so as to give a meaning and effect to every word and clause in the act. “ It could not have been contemplated in the use of the word attorney to imply he should be one in fact, but an attorney-at-law, unless we conceive the folly that after the word agent, the legislature should have seen the necessity of the relative term, conveying the identical same idea. If the word attorney does not mean one at-law, then it must be rejected as unmeaning and superflous.” Conklin and Smith vs. Goldsmith, 5 Florida 283.

It is objected to this construction, that an attorney-at-law cannot execute an attachment bond without violating the third rule of coux’t. “ That no attorney or other officer of court shall enter himself, or be taken as bail in any cximinal [148]*148case, or as security in attachment, appeal, or writ of error, or other proceeding in court, on pain of being considered in contempt, and of having the proceedings dismissed, on account thereof.” The decision in the ease of Love vs. Sheffelin & Co., 7 Fla., has been cited to sustain this objection. Neither the rule nor the decision seem to apply to this case. The rule prevents an attorney-at-law from signing an attachment bond as security, and was doubtless framed in reference to the authority granted under this statute — to make himself the principal.

Chief Justice Baltzell who delivered the opinion in the Love & Sheffelin case, must have been familiar with the decision in the case of Smith & Conklin vs. Goldsmith, and if ho had supposed that any conflict existed between the ruling in that case, and the rule of court which he considered so elaborately, he would have made some comment and not pass it over in silence.

In that opinion the Chief Justice gives as reasons for the adoption of the rule, that it was necessary to protect suitors, and to secure them a fair and impartial trial,¡by preventing officers of the court from voluntarily assuming liabilities, which would necessarily bias the judgment and secure them as active partisans on one side or the other of a cause, and perhaps enable them to impede or prevent the great ends of justice. Love vs. Sheffelin & Co., 7 Fla.

This reasoning certainly applies with great force to many of the officers of the court, but not so clearly to attorneys-at law, who generally have the very strongest motives for espousing one side or the other of every cause they undertake. Motives higher and stronger than mere personal liability for costs, and it docs not follow that they thereby impede and prevent the great ends of justice. The statute by conferring this authority seeks to secure and does not tend to impede or prevent the ends of justice as the remedy afforded by attachment would in many cases be unavailing, if the absent [149]*149.creditor is required to furnish, a special'authority to execute the necessary bond, in anticipation of his debtors fraudulent acts.

The next exception taken, was, that no process was served on the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Fla. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-simpson-co-v-knight-frasier-fla-1867.