Picquet v. Swan

19 F. Cas. 609, 5 Mason C.C. 35
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 15, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 19 F. Cas. 609 (Picquet v. Swan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Picquet v. Swan, 19 F. Cas. 609, 5 Mason C.C. 35 (circtdma 1828).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

This suit was commenced by a writ, which is known in this state as the “trustee process,” but is better known elsewhere as the “process of foreign attachment,” and was returnable to May term, 1827, of this court By the state laws it is a process equally applicable to cases, where the suit is against an inhabitant, and where it is against a non-resident, whether he has ever been an inhabitant or not. In the writ the parties are described as follows: The plaintiff as “of the city of Paris in the kingdom of France, an alien, and subject of .liis most Christian majesty the king of France, in his capacity as administrator,” &c., and the defendant, as “now commorant of the city of Paris in the kingdom of France, of the city of Boston, in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, one of the United States of America, and a citizen .of the said United States.” The return of the marshal on the writ is as follows: “Boston, April 18, 1827. Pursuant hereunto Í have attached all the real estate of the said James Swan lying and being in the district of Mass[610]*610achusetts, especially a lot of land in Boston in said district, bounded, &c., called the Washington Garden, &c., and summoned William Sullivan, Esq., agent for the said Swan, and on the same day I summoned the within named Sullivan, Otis, and Howard (the supposed trustees) to appear and show cause as within commanded, by leaving a true and attested copy of this writ at their last and usual places of abode. The said Swan has not been an inhabitant or resident within this district for three years last past.”

At the last term the trustees summoned in the suit were duly discharged. (Case No. 11,-133.] The defendant has never appeared as a parts' to the suit; and it is now contended, that the plaintiff is entitled to consider him in default, and to have a judgment by default entered against him. That is the point, which has been argued, and is now to be decided by the court I will briefly advert, in the first instance, to the local laws regulating this process, as they may be important to illustrate the conclusion, to which the court has arrived, and also more fully to explain .the grounds of the argument at the bar. The trastee process, under which the present suit is brought before the court, owes its origin to the act of 28th of February, 1795 (Act 1794, c. 63), which was a substitute for the provincial act of 32 Geo. II. c. 2, to enable creditors to receive their just debts out of the effects of their absent or absconding debtors. It provides, that “the officer to whom the writ is directed shall serve the same by attaching the goods and estate of the principal in his hands and possession of the value required, if so much may be found in his precinct, by reading the said writ to him, or by leaving an attested copy thereof at his last and usual place of abode, if he had been an inhabitant or resident within this commonwealth at any time within three years next before the suing out such writ, and by reading the same to each of the trustees, or by leaving an attested copy thereof at such trustees’ usual place of abode; and in case the principal has not been an inhabitant or resident as aforesaid, a service made on the supposed trustee or trustees in manner as aforesaid, shall be deemed a sufficient service,” &c. It further provides, that in case all the trustees are discharged, "the plaintiff may, notwithstanding, proceed against the principal to trial, judgment, and execution.” A subsequent statute (Act 1798, c. 5) has however provided, that “in all such cases, the plaintiff shall not proceed in his suit against the principal, unless there shall have been such service of the original writ upon the principal as would have authorized the court to proceed to render a judgment against him. in an action brought and commenced in the common and ordinary mode of process.” But the principal might voluntarily come into court and take upon himself the •defence of the suit. In the very case before the court all the trustees have been discharged; so that it is necessary to ascertain what service -would be sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to judgment in an action by the common and ordinary mode of process, which is, by our local laws, by a writ known by the name of a writ of “capias” or “attachment,” and authorizing either an arrest of the person of the defendant, or an attachment of his goods or estate. The act of 17th of February, 1798 (Act 1797, c. 50), provides for the mode of service of this process. Of course it can be used as a capias, only when the party is found within the state. When used as an attachment, the officer attaches the goods or estate of the defendant and a summons in due form is to be delivered to him, or left at “his dwelling-house, or place of last and usual abode,” fourteen days before the return day; and “in case the defendant was at no time an inhabitant or resident within this commonwealth,” then such summons is to be left with his or her tenant, agent, or attorney, _&c.; otherwise the writ shall abate. There is also provision made in this act, that if the defendant is not an inhabitant or present in the state at the time of the service, and does not return before the time of trial, the court may continue the same to the next term upon a suggestion of the fact on the record. If at such term the defendant does not appear, and be so remote, that notice of the suit could not probably be conveyed to him during the vacancy, the court may continue the same to the next term, and no longer. After these two continuances, if he does not appear, judgment by default may be entered up against him. It is not material to follow up the proceedings consequent upon such judgment. But it may not be useless to add, that the trustee act of 1794 (chapter 65) adopts regulations of a similar nature, in substance, to them. Qf their own force these processes and modes of service could have no validity in the courts of the United States. But by the act of congress of 29th of September, 1789, c. 21 [1 Stat. 93], the then existing forms of writs and modes of process (by which was meant modes of proceeding) in the supreme courts of the states, respectively, were adopted into the judicial proceedings of the courts of the United States; and by a subsequent act (Act 1792, c. 36 [1 Stat. 275]) the same forms were perpetuated, subject to the authority in the courts to alter and add to the same, in their discretion, so as to conform to the state jurisprudence. After the very elaborate expositions of this subject by the supreme court in Wayman v. Southard. 10 Wheat. [23 U. S.] 1, and United States Bank v. Halstead, Id. 51, it is unnecessary farther to discuss the nature and extent to which the state process applies in the courts of the United States. The state acts of 1795, c. 65; of 1797, c. 50; and of 1798, c. 5, — have never been adopted by any formal rule of the circuit court in this district; but they have constantly been used in it, both as to process [611]*611And service,'ever since their first enactment;- and must now be admitted to be of as high Authority by usage, as if any promulgation by rule, however formal, had taken place. They can have no effect, where they contravene the positive legislation of congress; nor •can they give a jurisdiction to this court, which it might not independently of them maintain. Where jurisdiction is given by any act of congress, this court may use the appropriate state process to enforce it. But the state laws can confer no authority on this court to extend its jurisdiction over persons or property, whom it could not otherwise reach.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 609, 5 Mason C.C. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picquet-v-swan-circtdma-1828.