Hanson v. Fowle

11 F. Cas. 465, 1 Sawy. 497, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 175
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMarch 1, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 F. Cas. 465 (Hanson v. Fowle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. Fowle, 11 F. Cas. 465, 1 Sawy. 497, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 175 (D. Or. 1871).

Opinion

. DEADY, District Judge.

Section 108 of the Code prohibits arrest in an action at law, except in certain cases therein specified. Subdivision 1 of said section authorizes an arrest of a defendant in an action for damages “for any injury to the person.” Section 107 of the Code prescribes the mode or conditions .of obtaining a writ of arrest in the cases specified in section 106. Code Or. 164, 165. Substantially these conditions are, that the facts authorizing the arrest shall appear by affidavit, and that the party asking the writ shall file an undertaking, with sureties, to the effect that they will pay defendant all damages which he may sustain by reason of the arrest.

Rules 2 and 7 of the S. C. admiralty rules, adopted at the term of December, 1844, authorize an arrest in all suits in personam; but rule 48, adopted at the term of December, 1850, “abolishes imprisonment for debt” on admiralty process in. all cases where it is abolished upon similar or analogous process by the laws of the state where the court is held. It seems that this rule is not deemed to adopt the conditions and restrictions imposed upon the right to arrest a defendant by the state law. It simply adopts the law of the state prescribing the instances or cases in which an arrest is allowed, leaving the national courts to pursue their own mode of proceeding in the premises. 2 Conk. Adm. 135, 136. Upon this understanding of the law and the rules applicable to the subject, the order allowing the warrant of arrest in this suit was made, and the warrant issued without the libellant first filing the undertaking to the defendants.

It is now contended by counsel for the motion, that the act of March 2. 1867 (14 Stat. 543), entitled, “An act supplementary to the several acts of congress abolishing imprisonment for debt,” applies to process in admiralty proceeding, and that therefore this warrant was improperly issued, because the libellant had not first performed the conditions imposed by section 107 of the Code upon plaintiff’s right to have a defendant.arrested in a similar case. If the premises are correct, the conclusion follows.

The act of 1S67 provides: “That whenever, upon mesne process or execution issuing out of any of the courts of the United States, any defendant therein is arrested or imprisoned, he shall be entitled to discharge from such arrest or imprisonment in the same manner as if he was so arrested or imprisoned on like process of the state courts in the same district. And the same oath may be taken, and the same length of notice thereof shall be required, as is provided by such state laws; and all modifications, conditions, and restrictions upon imprisonment for debt, now existing by the laws of any state, shall be applicable to process issuing out of the courts of the United States therein, and the same course of proceedings shall be adopted as now are or may be in the courts of such states. But all such proceedings shall be had before some one of the commissioners appointed by the United States circuit court to take bail and affidavits.”

The acts to which this purports to be supplementary are those of February 28. 1839, and January 4, 1841 (5 Stat. 321, 410); and taken together, they, in effect, abolish imprisonment for debt on process issuing out of any court of the United States, in all cases whatever where, by the laws of the state in which the said court shall be held, imprisonment for debt has been or shall hereafter be abolished: and also provided, that where, at the date of the first named act, imprisonment for debt was allowed upon conditions and restrictions, it should be allowed in like manner in the United States courts.

The provision in regard to conditions and [467]*467restrictions upon the allowance of an arrest not being prospective, do not adopt the laws of any state on that branch of the subject, passed since February 28, 1839. It was also held, that these acts did not apply to debtors of the United States (U. S. v. Hewes [Case No. 15,359]); nor to process in personam issuing, out of the admiralty courts (Gardner v. Isaacson [Id. 5,230]; Gaines v. Travis [Id. 5,180]).

Taken literally and construed without reference to any consideration beyond that appearing upon the face of the statute, there is no reason to suppose that congress did not intend the acts of 1839 and 1841 to apply ! to process in suits in admiralty, and with equal reason, the same may be said of the act of 1807. Yet Mr. Justice Betts, in 1848 and 1849, in the cases above cited (Gardner v. Isaacson and Gaines v. Travis), deliberately held the contrary, and I am satisfied to follow his conclusion, until congress shall' otherwise explicitly provide.

From the foundation of this .government, in all legislation concerning the process and proceedings in the national courts, congress has never confounded the three different and . distinct branches or heads of jurisdiction, known as “Common Law,” “Equity” and • “Admiralty.” The process acts of 1789, 1792, 1793 (1 Stat. 93, 275, 335), and 1828 (4 Stat. 278), all uniformly provide that the forms of writs, execution and other process, and the forms and modes of proceeding in suits of admiralty jurisdiction shall be according to ' the rules and usages which belong to courts . of admiralty as contradistinguished from . those of common law. These acts, except the first one (which was only temporary), also provide that these forms and modes of proceeding are subject to such alterations and additions as the courts of admiralty might deem expedient, “or to such Regulations as the supreme court of the United States shall think proper from time to time by rule, to prescribe to any circuit or district • court concerning the same.”

By the act of August 23, 1842 (5 Stat. 517), the supreme court was empowered to regulate the whole subject of process and proceeding in courts of admiralty. This was an extension, probably, of the power already conferred upon that court by the above cited acts of 1792,1793 and 1828. In pursuance of this authority the supreme court made rules 2, 7 and 48, regulating imprisonment on admiralty process, under which the arrest in this case was made.

Under this state of statutes, rules and decisions, all of which, it must be presumed. were well known to congress at that time, I do not think it reasonable to conclude tnat it was the intention of the act of 18G7 to modify the act of 1842 — change the rules of •the supreme court, and so far, withdraw the -subject from its authority. If so, it seems, to me, that process in admiralty would have been explicitly mentioned; particularly when it was so well known that similar language in the former statutes on the subject of .imprisonment for debt had been construed by the courts not to include courts of admiralty. On the other hand, substantial reasons can be assigned for the passage of the act of 1867, without including that of the regulation of imprisonment upon admiralty process.

The first half of the act has no application to the question before the court in any view of the subject. It only regulates — by adopting the law of the state upon the subject — the discharge of .persons already imprisoned for any cause, on process issuing out of the national courts. For instance, by the law of •this state a person imprisoned on execution —after judgment — ten days, may be finally discharged from such imprisonment if he makes it appear that he has no property liable to execution. Code Or. 759.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Cas. 465, 1 Sawy. 497, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-fowle-ord-1871.