James R. Hill & Co. v. Warren

54 Vt. 73
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 54 Vt. 73 (James R. Hill & Co. v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James R. Hill & Co. v. Warren, 54 Vt. 73 (Vt. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Yeazey, J.

This is audita querela to set aside a judgment of a justice of the peace. The defendants in that suit (plaintiffs here) were non-residents and had no notice. The plaintiffs now claim there was no legal service of the writ in the justice [76]*76suit; and no such recognizance for review as the statute requires in case of a judgment by default without notice. The defendants were described in the writ as being residents of Concord, New Hampshire. The return of the officer was as follows :

“ State op Vermont, ) At Waterbury, in said County, this 30th Washington Co. ss. ) day of January, 1880, I then served this writ on the within named defendants by attaching the propercy of J. R. Hill, G. H. Emery and Josiah G. Dwight, 14 sides of harness leather, and on the same day 1 left with George Jackman, freight agent, where I attached the property, for the defendants, a true and attested copy of the original writ with my return hereon thereon endorsed.”

The statute under which this service was made reads as follows :

“ When the goods or chattels of a person are attached at the suit of another, a copy of the attachment and a list of the articles attached, attested by the officer serving the same, shall be delivered to the party whose goods or chattels are so attached, or left at the house of his then usual abode, as directed in the service of summons, and if such person is not-an inhabitant of the State such copy shall be left -with his known agent or attorney, and for want thereof at the place where such goods or chattels were attached.” R. L. sec. 881.

I. This statute provides a method of service against non-residents if they have property in this State ; but it is not available unless strictly followed; and its construction should be such, within the proper scope of construction, as will secure fair dealing and be most likely to give notice of the proceeding. If the defendants had been residents or within the precinct at the time, they would each have been entitled to a copy of the attachment and list of the articles attached. Smilie v. Runnels et al., 1 Vt. 148. We think the reason is quite as strong, where service cannot be made upon the defendants in person, for leaving as many copies where the goods are attached. The reason for notice in all cases is equal; and the statute imports no design that the defendants shall not have notice in any case. Its object was to provide for the emergency of the defendants being out of the jurisdiction, but with guards to fairly protect them. We think it is [77]*77plain that if the defendants had had a known agent in this State, they would have each been entitled to have had a copy left with him. It would be very strange that the legislature should intentionally provide that one copy served upon an' agent of several absent defendants should be sufficient, when the law would have required a copy served on each if they had been in the jurisdiction. Yet the statute plainly imports that there shall be as many copies left where the goods are attached in case there is no known agent, as would be required to be left with an agent. The language is : “ and if such person is not an inhabitant of the State, such copy shall be left with his known agent or attorney, and for want thereof, at the place where such goods or chattels were attached.” This construction and view is strongly supported by the case of Washburn v. N. Y. & Vt. M. Co., 41 Vt. 50, which was an attachment of real estate under section 874, R. L., by lodging a copy in the town clerk’s office, and where it was held that an additional copy must be left for the absent defendant.

II. The return shows no reason for serving the writ in the method adopted. It does not show that the defendants were not within the precinct, nor that they had no known agent or attorney in the State. The methods of service provided are not alternative, but successive, the latter being proper only from necessity in default of ability to adopt the former. The court cannot presume the necessity ; but the return must show it in order to render the service valid.

III. Under that provision for leaving a copy where the goods were attached it might be proper to leave the copy with an individual ; but the propriety of it must be shown in the return. As before stated this statute is entitled to a strict construction. It provides for a proceeding in invitum. This return does not show in what relation Jackman stood to the property attached, or- why a copy should be left with him. So far as appears from the return, which could be the only guide of the court in deciding upon the validity of the service, there was no more propriety in leaving a copy with Jackman than there would have been in leaving [78]*78it with any person who happened to be there near the property at the time of the attachment. It would hardly be claimed that the legislature intended that such a service should be sufficient, or that a construction should be adopted that would make fraud quite so easy.

We do not say that the validity of the judgment until properly attacked was affected by the defective attachment and service ; but being now attacked by this proceeding, the first one available to these plaintiffs, we say, adopting the language of Barrett, J., in Folsom v. Conner, 49 Vt. 4, that the return showed : “ no such service was made by attachment and the leaving of copy as is required by the statute, in order to put the suit on foot so as to place these plaintiffs in any subjection to the proceeding in any stage or event of it. This would be conclusive in behalf of the plaintiffs upon this complaint.” 2 Vt. 407 ; 23 Vt. 573 ; 27 Vt. 533 ; 5 Vt. 549 ; 49 Vt. 98.

IV. Was there a sufficient recognizance for review ? The bond of recognizance was taken before execution for double the amount of the damages recovered, without including the costs. The statute applicable to that case required it to be double the amount of the judgment, which would include the costs. Gen. Sts. c. 31, s. 52. In the Revised Laws, section 14.07, this section was consolidated with section 49, c. 33, Gen. Sts., which was the section applicable to defaults without notice in the Supreme and County Court. The language of the two sections as they stood in the General Statutes, was not the same in the provision pertaining to the amount of the bond. The case of Phelps v. Parks, 4 Vt. 488, and referred to in Perry v. Whipple, 38 Vt. 278, had reference to a bond in the County Court.

In the trial of this suit parol evidence was introduced by both parties, subject to objection and exception, for the purpose of showing the facts upon which each relied independent of the justice record. The original files of the justice, which appear to have been put in evidence without objection, show that the recognizance as taken was too small. No proceeding was ever taken before execution to correct that error as it appeared on the orig[79]*79inal files, where the recognizance was fully set out in due form. But after the execution and sale it was retahen and re-written the same as before, except the figures were made larger, and it was this last recognizance which the justice inserted in his record, which he certified and a copy of which was produced by the defendant on this trial below.

The defendant now claims, first,

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54 Vt. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-r-hill-co-v-warren-vt-1881.