Mitchell v. Duncan

7 Fla. 13
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 7 Fla. 13 (Mitchell v. Duncan) 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
Mitchell v. Duncan, 7 Fla. 13 (Fla. 1857).

Opinions

Pearson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action for slander, in which Duncan, the appellee, on the 27th day of November, 1855, recovered his judgment against Mitchell, the appellant, for the sum of $1,650, together with costs. Execution was issued upon this judgment, bearing date the 6th day of December, 1855. On the 28th day of December, 1855, this execution was levied upon certain property of the appellant, and on the 4th day of February, 1856, he filed his affidavit of illegality in the following words, to-wit:

Wm. J. J. Duncan, vs. Stewart A. Mitchell, > Slander. In Hamilton Circuit Court — Middle Circuit of Florida.

I, Stewart A. Mitchell, being duly sworn, do depose and say that the execution issued against me in the above case is illegal in this: that the said writ has not been issued under the seal of Court from whence the same was issued, and nothing thereon is therefore legally due.

Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 4th day of February, A. D., 1856. STEWART A. MITCHELL.

Robert J. Lacy, Justice of the Peace.

On the same day Mitchell filed his bond to Dunca.n, [15]*15which was approved by the Sheriff, in double the amount of the said execution. The bond is in the usual form, but the condition thereof is as follows, viz :

The condition of the above obligation is such, That whereas affidavit has been made that a. certain execution in a case, wherein Wm. J. J. Duncan was plaintiff, and Stewart A. Mitchell was defendant, that the said execution was illegal in this: that the said writ has not been issued under the seal of the Court from whence the same was issued.— Now if it shall appear that the said writ has not been properly issued in this: that there is no seal to the said writ then the above obligation to be void, else to remain in full force and effect.”

At the April term of the Circuit Court thereafter, an order was made setting aside the affidavit of illegality and directing execution to issue against Mitchell and his securities on the bond. To this order and judgment the appellant excepted, and brings his appeal to this Court.

This was a proceeding under the 2nd and 3rd sections of the Act of 1834,“to amend an Act concerning executions,” the second section of which provides, “that in all cases where an execution shall issue illegal^, and the person against whom such execution is directed, his agent or attorney shall make oath thereof, and shall state in the affidavit the cause of such illegality, the Marshal, Sheriff or other officer, shall return the same to the next term of the Court from whence the same issued, and the Court shall determine thereon at such time; Provided, That the party making the affidavit be required to state whether any part of said execution be due, and where the party so making the affidavit shall admit a part of the execution to be legally due, the amount so acknowledged shall be paid before the affidavit is received ; And provided also, That the person claiming the benefit of this section shall execute to the Marshal, Sheriff or other officer, levying said execution, a bond with suffi[16]*16cient security, in at least double the amount of said execution, or that part thereof suspended by the affidavit.” And the third section provides, “ that if the affidavit of illegality be set aside, execution may issue against his securities on the bond.”

Although no exception was taken, nor the questionmade before us by counsel, yet it has been suggested that the 6th section of “ an Act to amend the execution laws,” approved the 15th March, 1844, operates as a repeal of the foregoing provisions of the Act of 1834. It is therefore necessary to dispose of this question before proceeding to consider of the sufficiency of the affidavit and bond under that Act.

The 6th section of the Act of 1844, provides, “ that the Court before which an execution is returnable, or the Judge in vacation may on application and notice to the adverse party, for good cause upon such terms as the Court may impose, direct a stay of the same, and the suspension of proceedings thereon, until the first termof the Court thereafter, or until a decission can be had on the same.”

And in the last section of the said Act it is declared that “ all laws inconsistent with this Act, be and the same are hereby repealed.”

The simple question then is whether the provisions of the Act of 1844 are inconsistent with those of the Act of 1834. These Statutes are in pari materia, and should therefore be construed together. They provide consistent and independent remedies for a defendant, against whom the process of execution is like to be abused and are distinguishable in several particulars. The first statute is confined to “cases where an execution shall issue illegally” and would not apply to cases where the abuse of the process was subsequent to a legal issue of the same. It prescribes an affidavit on the part of the party making the application, stating the particular cause of illegality complained of, and de[17]*17daring whether any part of the execution be due, and requires a bond with sureties to be executed by the applicant to the sheriff for double the amount suspended by the affidavit. The proceeding then under' this statute is in the nature of an application for an injunction in chancery..— The complainant is required to swear to the facts and merits of his ease, and is subjected to the further equity of declaring what sum is really duo, and relief is only granted to him upon condition that he secure the adverse party, for the amount suspended, by bond and sureties. And while these sureties afford tbo plaintiff in execution a new and further security for bis debt, which his judgment and execution did not supply, a summary remedy is given him, whereby he obtains execution against thorn at once, provided the affidavit be set aside. The remedy therefore afforded by this statute though analagous to that obtained by injunction, is more ample and convenient by reason of dispensing with the question of equity jurisdiction, and directing execution on the bond, without a formal suit thereupon.

Now the subsequent Act of 1844 lias none of these requirements, and imposes none of these conditions, it simply gives the Judge, at Chambers, upon notice to the opposite party, that power over the process of the Court which before he could only exorcise in open Court. It requires no affidavit of merits, it provides no new security by bond, it affords no execution again:t new parties, but merely authorises the Judge to suspend proceedings under the execution until the next term of the Court, or until a decision can he had on the same, upon, such conditions, as he may impose. . The suspension of the execution under this statute is the Act of the Court, while under the former Act it was suspended by the sheriff upon the requisitions of the law being fulfilled. The former law, therefore, might afford a remedy not available under the latter, in ease the judicial [18]*18office was vacant, or the Judge inaccessible, by reason of sickness or absence.

There are no recitals or words of repeal in the latter Act, in reference to the former, nor is there any apparent intention on the part of the Legislature to repeal it.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Fla. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-duncan-fla-1857.