Hardy v. Trabue

67 Ky. 644, 4 Bush 644, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 Ky. 644 (Hardy v. Trabue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy v. Trabue, 67 Ky. 644, 4 Bush 644, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 213 (Ky. Ct. App. 1868).

Opinion

.JUDGE PETERS

bblivbeed the opision oí? the doubt:

In May, 1866, H. Hardy, a resident of the county of Calloway — a farmer, merchant, and a dealer and speculator in tobacco — was indebted to various planters for their crops of tobacco, and to others on other accounts; his aggregate indebtedness being very large compared with the value of his estate and his means to discharge it.

A tobacco fair was held in Paducah on the 25th and 26th of May, 1866. According to previous arrangements, Hardy had been selected as one of the judges of articles to be exhibited at said fair; and publication of the time, place, and objects of the fair, with the names of the judges, had been made for reasonable and proper time before it came off. For days, and weeks, perhaps, previously, Hardy had expressed his intention to his associates and neighbors, and to some of his creditors, -to attend the fair.

On the morning of the 23d of May he set out for Paducah, distant forty-five miles from his home; anived in Benton, Marshall county, early in the forenoon, having [646]*646traveled to that place from home, a distance of eighteen or twenty miles, in about three hours, as he told Jones, a witness. He remained in Benton several hours — if on business, he failed to show it. He then left Benton, and went to Palma, eight miles on his way to Paducah; remained there with Mr. Wade, his brother-in-law, all night, and reached Paducah the next day, where the greater portion of the tobacco which he had purchased from the planters had been sent by him, to be sold during the fair, some of which arrived on the 23d, and the residue in a few days afterwards.

On the 29th of May he had not retured from the fair, and some of his creditors, on that day, instituted suits against him, with attachments, and during several other successive days other creditors brought their actions against him, with attachments, all of which were levied on the real and personal estate of said Hardy, or such of it as could be found in the counties of Calloway and Marshall.

Hardy returned home on the 7th of June, and, during the June term of the Calloway circuit court, which commenced the 11th of the month, he filed his affidavits in the several actions against him, controverting the grounds for suing out said attachments, and moved for their discharge ; but his motions were overruled, the actions having been previously consolidated. In some of the cases, summons were executed on Hardy in time for judgments at the June term; and in some of those in which process had not been executed, he entered his appearance; but as he put in no answer, and did not controvert the alleged indebtedness in said cases, personal judgments were rendered against him, and the attachments were sustained. Of so much of the judgments as sustained the attachments, Hardy and others complain, and seek a reversal [647]*647upon two grounds — First. “ That the affidavits upon which the attachments, or some of them, were founded, are defective and insufficient;” and, second. That the judgment sustaining them was not authorized by the evidence.

In Trabue, Davis Co. vs. Hardy, which was the first action brought in the list, the original grounds for the attachment stated in the petition are, that said “ H. Hardy has left the county of his residence to avoid the service of a summons, or so conceals himself that a. summons cannot be served on him.”

Here two grounds for an attachment are stated, either of which of itself, and independent of every and all others, would be sufficient; but it is insisted in an able brief by the learned counsel for appellants that an attachment has never been sustained by this court where two or more grounds therefor are set forth in the affidavit in the alternative; and the case of Shipp vs. Davis (Har., 65) is mainly relied upon as sustaining that position. That case, as the opinion shows, was decided upon the authority of the case of Cooper vs. Logan (Pr. Dec., 320).

The attachments in both of these cases were issued under the statute of 1796 (1st volume M. 4* Brown's Digest, p. 158), the 5th section of which provides, that it shall be lawful for any justice of the peace, upon complaint to him made by any person that his debtor is removing out of the county privately, or absconds and conceals himself so that the ordinary process of the law cannot be served upon him, to grant an attachment against the estate of such debtor. * * * * The grounds stated for the attachment in Shipp vs. Davis, supra, are, that “the said John Shipp hath privately removed himself out of the county, or so absconds and conceals himself that the ordinary process of the law cannot be served upon him.”

[648]*648It is true, that, according to the terms in which the opinion is expressed, the attachment was quashed, because the complaint was not positive, but in the alternative, in not alleging positively that the defendant was removing out of the county privately, or that he so absconded and concealed himself that the ordinary process of law could not be served on him.

It is important to observe that the first part of the complaint, or first ground of attachment in this case, was wholly insufficient to sustain such a proceeding; it was in the past tense. The allegation is, that the defendant hacl removed. In that condition of the debtor the statute did not apply; it only applied when he is removing — • the present tense; and this construction was given to it in Davis vs. Edwards (Har., 342), and in Kennedy vs. Dillon (1 A. K. Mar., 354). This objection, however, was not directly commented upon in Shipp vs. Davis, supra, if observed by the court; but in the case of Davis vs. Edwards, where the same defect in the complaint existed, the court said : “ The present attachment is in the alternative — the one case clearly without the provisions of the statute, and the other cannot be said to be within it.”

This defect in the statement of the complaint in Shipp vs. Davis may have escaped the attention of the court, as it was not commented on; but in Davis vs. Edwards it certainly did not, as appears from the quotation just made from the opinion in that case; and the language of the opinion authorizes the conclusion that the attachment was adjudged bad, on account of a substantial departure in the statement of the grounds for the attachment, rather than that the statement was made in the alternative. But be that as it may, it has not been directly decided in any of the cases referred to under the act of [649]*6491796, supra, that an attachment would not be sustained where the grounds therefor were set out in the very words of the statute, because the two grounds were stated in the alternative, and, therefore, cannot be said to be in conflict with “ Wood vs, Wells (2 Bush, 197,” as contended by counsel for appellants.

It seems to be conceded, that if the ruling of this court in the last named case is adhered to, upon a reconsideration thereof, the grounds for the attachments in the larger number of these consolidated cases must be adjudged sufficient.

A review of the questions decided in the last named case, and also in the case of Harrod vs. Orear,

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ky. 644, 4 Bush 644, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-trabue-kyctapp-1868.