Richardson v. Cleaveland & Huggins

5 Port. 251
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 Port. 251 (Richardson v. Cleaveland & Huggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Cleaveland & Huggins, 5 Port. 251 (Ala. 1837).

Opinion

GOLDTHWAITE, J.

Cleaveland and Huggins, filed a petition in the County Court of Mobile [256]*256county, alledging, “they had furnished stores, provisions, merchandise and materials, to the steam boat Ophelia, to the value of fifteen hundred and five dollars and eighty-eight cents, that the amount of their account for these articles, furnished by them, is justly due them by the owners and master of the said boat and has never been paid.”

They further represent, “that the .steam boat is commanded by Sardine G. Stone, that she is, as they believe, duly enrolled, registered and licensed, that she has been employed in navigating the rivers of Mobile bay; that the said articles were furnished at the special request of the owners and mas-> ter of said boat, at Mobile, and at divers times, from the seventh day of January, in the year eighteen hundred and thirty-five, to the twentieth of April, in the year eighteen hundred and thirty-six, as per ,.tlie'account now filed. And further, they represent, “that the said boat is about to leave the port of Mobile; and that neither the master or owners reside in Mobile.”

The petition prays process to issue for the seizure of the said boat, in the nature of admiralty process, according to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, so that the said vessel be made answerable for the payment of the debt so due, and all costs.

The facts stated in the petition, were verified, by the affidavit of one of the petitioners, and the Judge of said Court by his fiat, directed admiralty process to issue, according to the prayer of the petition, returnable to the second Monday of June, eighteen hundred and thirty-six. Process was is[257]*257sued against the boat, her tackel, apparel and fur-niturer which were seized by the sheriff, and released by him on the order of the clerk of said Court, that bond had been given according to law.

On the fifth of May, eighteen hundred and thirty-six, John Richardson, Edward Sims and Rucker Redding, entered into bond, payable to the plaintiffs, in the sum of three thousand dollars, — the condition of which recites, “that whereas Cleaveland and Hoggins, had filed in the County Court of Mobile county, process in the nature of a libel, in admiralty proceedings, against the steam boat Ophelia, of which said John Richardson is owner, for goods, wares and merchandise, and supplies, furnished by them to said boat, to the amount teen hundred and five dollars and eighty-eight c^fiti.- ¿i/: Now, if the said John Richardson, shall well and truly, answer the demand so filed as aíbresa|tkÍMnSlilÉ€ this obligation to be void.” V

A citation and monition to all. persons, jpkften ing to have an interest in the said boat, was sued, but no return appears on the record.

On the twenty-third day of June, eighteen hundred and thirty-six,' an appearance was made in the following terms: “Came the plaintiffs by their attorneys, and also came John Richardson, professing to be owner and proprietor of said steam boat, Ophelia, ” who moved the Court by .his attorneys, “ to quash the libel aforesaid, and to dismiss the whole proceedings, upon the ground of a want of jurisdiction in the Court, and because the proceedings were unauthorised by any statute of the State.”

[258]*258The motion was overruled, and Richardson then making it appear to the satisfaction of the Court, that he was the owner of the steam boat Ophelia, offered to fde an answer to the libel, in writing, which he then produced, denying most of the allegations : This answer, was on motion of the libel-ants, rejected, for the reason that it was not vere-fied by the oath of the claimant The Court then proceeded to determine the cause, without the intervention of a jury, this course being agreed to by the claimants and libelants, — and awarded the sum of one thousand and twenty-five dollars and sixteen cents, to the libelants, decreeing that they had a lien on the boat for that sum, and condemned the said boat, her tackle, apparel, engine and furniture, for the payment of the said sum and the costs of suit. The Court also, after reciting that Richardson, as the owner of said boat, had entered into stipulation with Sims and Redding as sureties, by means whereof the boat had been released, so that she could not then be had, for the purpose of sale, under the condemnation, aforesaid, proceeded to decree, that Richardson, Sims and Redding, pay the said sum so ascertained to be due, and the costs of suit, and that the libelants should have execution against them.

To reverse this judgment, Richardson, Sims and Redding, have sued out a writ of error to this Court, and have assigned the following as reasons for a reversal.

1st. The Court erred in not quashing the libel.

2nd. Im not receiving the answer of Richardson.

[259]*2593d. In rendering judgment against the securities in the replevy bond, and—

4th. In condemning the boat, her tackle, &c. for the debt.

On the first assignment of error, the constitutionality of the acts of the legislature conferring jurisdiction on the County Court,' to proceed in cases of this nature, has been drawn in question, as well as the technical accuracy of these proceedings, under those acts. The questions will be separately examined.

1. The acts of eighteen hundred and twenty-four,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Port. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-cleaveland-huggins-ala-1837.