Oakley v. Aspinwall

4 N.Y. 514
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 4 N.Y. 514 (Oakley v. Aspinwall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oakley v. Aspinwall, 4 N.Y. 514 (N.Y. 1851).

Opinions

Bronson, Ch. J.

The plaintiff applied for and obtained the attachment on a petition and affidavit sworn to by him, stating that Baker & Young were indebted to him in a specified sum of money “ arising upon a certain judgment” against them in his favor. Baker got the attachment discharged on giving a bond, with a condition to pay the amount justly due by Baker & Young to the plaintiff on account of any debt so claimed and [518] sworn to by him.” This is an action on the bond ; and one question is, whether the plaintiff has proved that he had a debt against Baker & Young “ arising upon a judgment.” On the trial the plaintiff produced a judgment in his favor against Baker & Young; but it was rendered in a suit in which Baker neither appeared, nor was served with process. Such a judgment does not prove a debt against Baker; nor is it prima facie evidence of indebtedness, which must be rebutted. As against him, the judgment is of no other force or effect than such as has [517]*517been expressly given to it by the legislature. It is a first principle in the administration of justice, that no one shall be condemned, nor be made to suffer, either in his person, fame, or estate, before he has had an opportunity to be heard in his defence. Although this principle is not always properly regarded in framing laws, our present joint debtor act gives no effect to the judgment, as against the defendant not brought into court, beyond allowing the execution to be collected of the personal property which he owns as a partner with the other defendants. (2 R. S. 377, §§ 1 to 4.) If there had been nothing beyond this omission to give any farther force to the judgment, an action could not be maintained upon it, nor could it be made the foundation for an attachment against the defendant who was not served with process, and who did not appear. Nothing short of express words, or necessary implication in a statute could give such an effect to the judgment. But this is not all. There is more than an omission to give a greater force to the judgment. The legislature has plainly enough declared that it shall have no effect beyond reaching partnership property. After allowing a judgment in form against all the defendants, (§ 1,) the second section provides, that as against the defendant who had no opportunity to answer, the judgment “ shall be evidence only of the extent of the plaintiff’s demand, after the liability of such defendant shall have been established by other evidence.” The judgment is not prima facie evidence of his liability, which must be rebutted. It proves nothing. The liability must be “ established by other evidence.” The language is not only plain enough; but it expresses the intention of the revisers, as appears by their note upon the section: and it is [519] moreover in accordance with the great principle that no man shall lose his right by a judicial proceeding until after he has had an opportunity to be heard.

If the judgment is no evidence of Baker’s liability, it is of course no proof of a debt against him. It is plainly absurd to assert the contrary. The plaintiff himself did not pretend on the trial that the judgment proved a debt against Baker; but after reading the record, he proceeded to give evidence for the [518]*518purpose of showing that Baker & Young had been partners in business, and were indebted to him for the proceeds óf certain cargoes of goods which he had consigned to Young for sale. This evidence was an entire departure from the ground on which the attachment was procured; and it wholly failed to show that the plaintiff had a debt against Baker & Young “ arising upon a judgment.” This is not a mere question of form. The plaintiff has not proved any breach of the condition of the bond on which the action is brought.

If the plaintiff had a debt against Baker & Young as general partners in the commission business—about which there is much room for doubt—his attachment proceedings against them should be founded upon that debt, or upon the debt in connection with the judgment. He should have stated in the usual way, that he had a demand arising upon contract, (2 R. S. 3, § 3 ;) to which it might have been added, if it was deemed a matter of any. importance, that he had obtained a judgment for the amount in a suit where Baker did not appear, and was not served with process. And when a creditor wishes to sue in a case of this kind, he should proceed in the same way—declaring upon the original cause of action; and either adding or omitting the recovery of the judgment, as he pleases. The judgment adds no force to the claim. It is absurd to say that a party may have an action on a judgment which is no evidence of the defendant’s liability. He might as well sue -on a piece of blank paper.

When an action was brought on a judgment recovered under the former joint debtor act, if the defendant pleaded nothing but nul tiel record, the judgment was held to be prima facie evi[520] dence of his liability. But in Mervin v. Kumbel, (23 Wend. 293,) all the judges were agreed that the present statute had altered the old law; and if an action were brought upon a judgment recovered since 1830, the plea of nul tiel record would put the plaintiff to the proof of the original demand against the party who was not brought into court in the first suit. Two of the judges thought in that case that the plaintiff might still sue on the judgment, instead of suing upon the original demand, or [519]*519upon that in connection with the judgment; but it was not necessary to decide the question, as all the judges were agreed in reversing the judgment upon another ground. A judgment which is not prima facie evidence against the defendant can not, in the nature of things, be a sufficient foundation for an action; and as the contrary has never been necessarily decided, I feel quite at liberty to settle the question upon principle.

• It is said that the original demand was merged in, and extinguished by the judgment, and consequently that the plaintiff must sue upon the judgment, if he sues at all. That would undoubtedly be so, if both the defendants had been before the court in the original action. But the joint debtor act creates an anomaly in the law; and for the purpose of giving effect to the statute, and at the same time preserving the rights of all parties, the plaintiff must be allowed to sue on the original demand. There is no difficulty in pursuing such a course; it can work no injury to any one; and it will avoid the absurdity of allowing a party to sue on a pretended cause of action, which is in truth no cause.of action at all; and then to recover on proof of a different demand.

Although the point is not made by the bill of exceptions, the court below held that, after establishing the joint indebtedness of the defendants, the statute fixes the amount of the liability at the amount of the judgment. I can not subscribe to that doctrine. In my opinion the plaintiff can only recover to the extent of the liability which he establishes by evidence other than the judgment. He may recover less, but can not recover more than the amount of the judgment. I shall never yield my assent to the doctrine, that the plaintiff may prove a joint liability on the part of the defendants to the amount of [521] one dollar, or an indefinite sum, and then have a verdict for a thousand dollars—or ten thousand, as the case may be—on producing a judgment for that amount.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.Y. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakley-v-aspinwall-ny-1851.