Pomeroy v. Crocker

3 Pin. 378, 4 Chand. 174
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Pin. 378 (Pomeroy v. Crocker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pomeroy v. Crocker, 3 Pin. 378, 4 Chand. 174 (Wis. 1851).

Opinion

KNOWLTON, J.

This suit was brought in the circuit court of Kenosha county by the plaintiff in error against the defendants in error for false imprisonment. The defendants appeared and specially pleaded in bar of the action, a judgment which had been duly rendered against the plaintiff in an action of replevin [380]*380in favor of of tbe defendant, Turner, and one William Strong, Jr., and justified the talcing and imprisoning of the plaintiff by virture of a capias ad satisfaciendum issued upon said judgment. To these pleas the plaintiff demurred. The court overruled the demurrer, and rendered judgment against the plaintiff for costs. He removed the cause into this court by writ of error.

That the case may be the better understood, it is well to state that the judgment in replevin, as pleaded, was rendered in favor of the defendants in that action for the value of the property then in controversy, and for costs, they electing under our statute to take such judgment, instead of the judgment for a return of the property which had been delivered to the plaintiff on the writ of replevin. Parker was the clerk who issued, and Crocker the sheriff who executed the ca. sa.

I take the rule of law under our statute and constitution to be, that the party in whose favor a judgment is rendered for damages as a requital for a tort committed by the party against whom such judgment is rendered, may take the body of the person against whom such judgment has passed, and imprison him.

I also hold that whenever damages are given and costs awarded in such judgment, that the party obtaining such judgment is entitled to like final process for enforcing payment or satisfaction for the costs, as he is for his damages, such costs being only a necessary incident to the judgment for damages.

Another position in my opinion equally sound is this: That, as our statute stands, no person can be imprisoned on a judgment rendered against him upon any contract, express or implied; nor when by mere operation of statutory provision judgment passes against him; he in respect thereof not having committed any tortious act; as to the party in whose favor such judgment was rendered.

By R. S., ch. 119, sec. 40, it is declared that “every judgment rendered in an action of replevin, whether in favor of [381]*381the plaintiff or defendant, for any damages or costs, or for any other sum of money, shall be docketed in the same manner, and shall have the like effect as a charge upon the real estate and chattels real of the party against whom it is recovered as judgments in personal actions.” Now I take it, that if judgments in replevin for any sum of money are to have like effect as a charge upon realty as other judgments in personal actions, that then that charge must be discharged or obliterated in the same way that judgments in personal actions are, otherwise (upon the hypothesis that legislation went no further), the charge would be of no earthly use, as satisfaction could never be obtained. The charge would remain, but only an eyesore to the party in whose favor it stood; while at the same time it would be a consoling balm to the party against whom it rested. I am not disposed to give statutes a construction that would result injuriously to community, and which could only rest upon the bosom of absurdity. However, we are not left in the necessitous condition of seeking a mode of enforcing a judgment by the elasticity of construction. By R. S., ch. 102, sec. 26: “Whenever judgment shall be rendered in any court of record, for any debt, damages, sum of money, or costs, the party in whose favor such judgment is rendered, upon filing the record thereof, and within two years thereafter, may have execution to the sheriff or other proper officer, to collect the amount of such judgment.” Sec. 28 of the same chapter reads, “ such execution may be either: 1. Against the goods and chattels, lands, tenement and chattels real of the party against whom the judgment was recovered. 2. Against the body of such in cases where executions against the body are allowed by law.”

Suffice it to say that our law has not provided that execution against the body should go upon judgments in replevin, like the one at bar. It is however provided by statute, as we have just seen, that execution may in such cases, go against the personal property, lands, tenements, and chattels real of the party against whom judgment is rendered.

[382]*382As this mode of obtaining satisfaction is provided upon the principle that when a right and a means of enforcing that right are given by statute, which are new, or did not previously exist at common law, the statute mode of enforcing that right must, alone be pursued ; and that every means, not expressed in the statute, is excluded as effectually as though express negative words were to that end used. Now that peculiar judgment given in this action of replevin could not have been obtained at the common law, but only by virtue of the statute. It was therefore a statutory right, and the party taking it should be content with the remedies by statute provided for the enforcement of that right. It is idle to say that the party may have any final process that the common law gave, for obtaining satisfaction of a judgment rendered in accordance therewith. The reason is, that the final process is and must be applicable to the judgment, and not having a judgment at the common law, of course no right could exist to use a common law writ to enforce satisfaction.

But it is said that the circuit courts of this state are by statute authorized to devise new writs when it is necessary to carry into effect their judgments. But this granted, does not help the matter, for the obvious reasons that the ccc. sa. used, was an old, and not a new writ devised by the court. But the party made use of a writ devised in olden times. Again, the legislature has, as has been already shown, provided what kind of execution might go on such judgment; and that being done, the court is not at liberty to devise a different, or any writ, because it does not become necessary for the court to do so in order to carry into effect its judgment.

That the action of replevin under our statute is a tort action must, I think, be conceded by all who take the trouble to read the first and second sections of chapter 119 of the revised statutes. The language is : “ Whenever any goods or chattels shall have been wrongfully taken, or shall have been wrongfully detained, an action of replevin may be brought for •the recovery thereof, and for the recovery of the damages sus[383]*383tained by reason of such unjust caption or detention, except in tbe eases hereinafter specified.” Sec. 2. “Whenever any person might maintain an action for any personal property wrongfully taken, such person may maintain an action of re-plevin for such property."

Now suppose it be conceded that the plaintiff recovering judgment in any tort action might take the body of the defendant in execution, it would by no means follow that, if by statutory provision the defendant might have judgment for a sum of money, besides costs against the plaintiff in the same action, in case he, the plaintiff, failed to maintain his action, that therefore such defendant might take the body of the plaintiff in execution on his judgment. In the former ease, the plaintiff would be entitled to take the body of the defendant, because the defendant was convicted of committing a tort.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Pin. 378, 4 Chand. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomeroy-v-crocker-wis-1851.