Smith v. Weeks

18 N.W. 778, 60 Wis. 94, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 82
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 18 N.W. 778 (Smith v. Weeks) 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
Smith v. Weeks, 18 N.W. 778, 60 Wis. 94, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 82 (Wis. 1884).

Opinion

Oetoit, J.

This action is brought to recover damages against the defendants, as sheriff and deputy sheriff of Bane county, for unlawful arrest, false imprisonment, and abuse of process. The defendants justified the jirrest and imprisonment by an attachment, issued by a court commissioner of said county, for contempt in not appearing and answering according to an order of said commissioner, made and served by virtue of sec. 3031, R. S.; and denied the abuse of such process. This section provides that when an execution is issued and before its return, upon proof that the judgment debtor “ has property which he unjustly refuses to apply towards the satisfaction of the judgment,” an order may be made requiring the judgment defendant to appear “ to answer concerning the same.”

The writ of attachment in this case recites all the antecedent proceedings, and the order which it alleges the defendant failed or refused to obey, as the cause thereof, and as a contempt of the commissioner. The order recited was that the defendant should appear to make discovery on oath concerning his property, and to abide and perform such further or other order as might be made by [the commissioner] in the premises.” The fact found by the commissioner to obtain such order was that the defendant “ has property, to wit, the household furniture, for the purchase [100]*100price of which, this judgment was rendered, which he unjustly refuses to apply to the satisfaction of this judgment.” There is a verbal departure from the statute in this order, by using the word “ to ” instead of “ towards,” but whether material, quaere? The attachment for contempt was for the disobedience of this order.

This is the first case, so far as I can ascertain, under sec. 3031, ch. 131, R. S., “ Of Remedies Supplementary to Execution,” which has come to this court. This chapter was borrowed from the New York Code, and this particular section was in that Code, subd. 2 of sec. 292, and in1 our Code was the second clause of sec. 202, ch. 120, Laws of 1856. This provision has had frequent and uniform construction in the courts of New York, and such construction we are inclined to adopt, because reasonable. Proceedings supplementary to execution ar-e a substitute for a creditor’s bill in equity. In re Remington, 7 Wis., 643; Graham v. La C. & M. R. R. Co., 10 Wis., 459; Seymour v. Briggs, 11 Wis., 196; Barker v. Dayton, 28 Wis., 367. The statute, as well as the proceeding by creditor’s bill, clearly contemplates two distinct causes for a creditor’s bill and of an order upon a judgment defendant to appear before the court for examination and disclosure: (1) after an execution has been returned unsatisfied in whole or in part; (2) after an execution has been issued, and before its return. The latter was the proceeding in this case. The jurisdiction of a court of chancery by creditor’s bill in each of these two distinct classes of cases is most exhaustively treated in McElwain v. Willis, 9 Wend., 561. In the first case the legal remedies must have been exhausted by a return of the execution before the interposition of equity to aid the plaintiff in the collection of his debt out of assets of the defendant liable to levy. In the second case equity lends its aid to a proceeding at law to subject the property of the debtor to the execution, which he owns, but which for some reason cannot be levied upon and sold [101]*101because not subject to levy, or by reason, perhaps, of some act of the debtor which will be tantamount to an unjust refusal to apply it towards the satisfaction of the judgment. It is said in that case that the defendant “ possessed choses in action, or equitable interests, not tangible by execution; ” and, further, that “ the jurisdiction of the court rests upon the right or title of the complainant to the property in question, acquired by the proceeding at law upon the judgment and execution; and, consequently, the return of the latter by the officer is not only not essential, but would be fatal to the relief;” and, again, “it is to remove some fraudulent or inequitable obstruction interposed by the defendant to the collection of the judgment, independently of which the remedy would have been ample at law.” In the opinion of Senator Tbaoy, in the same case, it is said, after defining the jurisdiction of a court of equity in the first class of cases, “ the other, where the property has been removed before a lien was obtained, or where it consists in choses in action, or interests not liable to execution.” In that case it is held that the allegations of the bill must show equitable grounds of relief under one or the other of the causes, or the court has no jurisdiction in the case. This case is in agreement with other cases of creditors’ bills, as shown by the authorities cited in the opinions. In Clark v. Bergenthal, 52 Wis., 103, in a case under the first class, where the execution must have been first returned before an order could be made requiring the defendant to make disclosure of his property, Mr. Justice Cassoday says, in the opinion, after speaking of the officers who may .make the order: “Each of the officers mentioned can obtain jurisdiction in the manner 'prescribed, and in no other way. ... If the proper affidavit is made, and the proper facts exist, the commissioner obtains jurisdiction.” That proceeding was under the first class of cases of execution returned, and the statute in respect thereto does not in terms require any affidavit or other proof of the facts, but it [102]*102is of course clearly implied that proof should be made in some way to justify the order. In respect to the second class of cases, the statute is specific, that “upon proof by affidavit to the satisfaction of the judge, etc., that any judgment debtor, etc., has property which he unjustly refuses to apply towards the satisfaction of the judgment, etc., he may make an order,” etc. In Lamonte v. Pierce, 34 Wis., 483, the present chief justice recognized an affidavit stating all the essential facts as necessary to give the court or officer jurisdiction in the first class of cases, and held the affidavit in that case as sufficient in all respects.

The contempt in this case consisted in the disobedience of the defendant of the order of the commissioner, and is the cause of his arrest, and. of course the order is a necessary part of the warrant or attachment. In this case the order and the proofs, if any there were, are recited in the-writ by which the defendants seek to justify the arrest, so that if the order appears to be void on its face the attachment also so appears, and shows that the commissioner had no jurisdiction.

A reference to the source of this statute as to the second class of cases throws much light upon the question of the groundwork of the proceeding. This provision in subd. 2 of sec. 292 of the New York Code of Procedure, from which we borrowed it, was analogous to subd. 2 of seo 8 of the act to abolish imprisonment for debt, etc., in that state in 1831. To obtain a warrant under that act, “satisfactory evidence had to be adduced to the officer that the debtor had property which he unjustly refused to apply to the payment of the judgment.” The same language, substantially, is used in this provision. It was held under that law that the property sought to be reached was not subject to seizure on execution, such as property consisting of money or choses in action, not in view of the officer, or so situated that it became the equitable duty of the debtor to apply it on the [103]*103judgment. Steward v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rubin v. Schrank
241 N.W. 370 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1932)
Schreiner v. Hutter
177 N.W. 826 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1920)
Fitzhugh v. Reid
252 F. 234 (E.D. Arkansas, 1918)
Flaherty v. Ginsberg
110 N.W. 1050 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
Emerson v. Huss
106 N.W. 518 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1906)
Enders v. Smith
100 N.W. 1061 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1904)
First National Bank of Laramie v. Cook
76 P. 674 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1904)
Bradshaw v. Frazier
113 Iowa 579 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1901)
Docter v. Riedel
37 L.R.A. 580 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1897)
Gore v. Brucker
68 N.W. 396 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1896)
Pierstoff v. Jorges
56 N.W. 735 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1893)
Gilbert v. Stockman
51 N.W. 1076 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1892)
Reardon v. Henry
47 N.W. 1022 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1891)
Woodward v. Hall
44 N.W. 114 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1890)
Farwell v. Wilmarth
26 N.W. 548 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.W. 778, 60 Wis. 94, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-weeks-wis-1884.