Stock v. Reynolds

80 N.W. 289, 121 Mich. 356, 1899 Mich. LEXIS 578
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 80 N.W. 289 (Stock v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stock v. Reynolds, 80 N.W. 289, 121 Mich. 356, 1899 Mich. LEXIS 578 (Mich. 1899).

Opinions

Hookek, J.

The defendant was, during these proceedings, a grain dealer at Eaton Rapids, in the county of Eaton. The plaintiff resided in Hillsdale county. The plaintiff obtained a writ of attachment against the defendant from a justice of the peace in-Hillsdale county upon an affidavit alleging that “there is justly due to him from the defendant, upon implied contract, the sum of $150, * * * and that the said Isaac N. Reynolds, as deponent has good reason to believe, is about to remove his property from said county of Hillsdale, and refuses and neglects to pay or secure payment of this debt.” The officer attached a car of wheat, and, being unable to find defendant in the county, left copies of the writ and inventory with the station agent of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company, in whose possession he found the wheat. On the return day the cause was adjourned to the 13th day of November, the defendant having appeared specially, and moved to quash the writ. On November 2d the defendant filed a petition with a circuit [358]*358court commissioner of Hillsdale county for a dissolution of the attachment, which was heard upon its merits, both parties participating, on November 12th, and the commissioner made an order dissolving the attachment. The case was afterwards heard in the circuit court on appeal from this order, and the same was reversed. The court filed a written finding, and the case is now before us upon certiorari.

The finding states that in July, 1897, the defendant sold to the plaintiff two car loads of No. 2 red wheat, of grade equal to wheat previously sold. This was done by correspondence, dated July 28th, 29th, and 30th. One car was shipped July 31st, the other August 2d. The last car shipped was accepted and paid for. The first car arrived at Litchfield on July 31st, but was not inspected until August 11th, and meantime the draft which accompanied the car was paid by the plaintiff. When inspected, it was rejected, as not up to the grade agreed upon, and defendant took back the wheat, and repaid plaintiff for it. Plaintiff demanded that another car be sent, and defendant refused. Meantime the price of wheat advanced. The wheat attached was the property of the defendant, and was shipped the same day that it was levied upon, to a commission house in Detroit, and in course of transit passed through Hillsdale county, and while being held in Jonesville, awaiting the freight train upon the main line of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway, was taken upon the writ. The return also shows that a motion to quash was granted by the justice during the pendency of the proceedings to dissolve the attachment, whereupon that proceeding was taken, by certiorari to the circuit court, by which court the judgment of the justice was sustained. Both orders were made by the circuit court upon April 29, 1898, though the finding alluded to was filed earlier.

The question before us relates to the proceedings to dissolve the attachment; and, as the levy fell with the quashing of the writ by the circuit court, we conclude that costs [359]*359only are at stake. The principal questions sought to be raised appear to be:

1. Whether it can be said, under the facts in this case, that the defendant was about to remove his property from the county of Hillsdale, within the meaning of the attachment statute.
2. Did the defendant neglect to pay or secure the debt, within the meaning of the statute ?
3. Would this claim, as found to exist by the circuit judge, support an affidavit alleging that an amount was due upon implied contract, the same not being liquidated ?
4. Whether the court had jurisdiction to render a judgment for costs in the dissolution proceeding, in view of the fact that the justice acquired no jurisdiction, for the reason that there was no personal, nor a proper substituted, service of the writ.

The petition for dissolution states that the only ground for attachment stated in the affidavit is that “the defendant * * * is about to remove his property from said county of Hillsdale, and refuses and neglects to pay or secure the payment of the debt, with intent to defraud Ms creditors of $150, claimed to be due from the defendant to the plaintiff;” and denies that the petitioner was about to remove his property from said county with intent to defraud Ms creditors, or that he was indebted to the plaintiff in any sum. As we have already seen, the affidavit for attachment did not contain the charge stated in the petition. Moreover, the petition does not negative the charge that it does contain, viz., that “the defendant is about to remove his property from said county, and refuses and neglects to pay or secure payment of this debt.” The denial is not as broad as this charge, but is limited to a neglect and refusal to pay with a fraudulent intent. So far as the point is concerned, the case is equally within the principle of Bane v. Keys, 115 Mich. 244.

The only other denial contained in the petition is that of indebtedness. If this were a charge of fraudulent intent, it is possible that evidence in support of this might be admissible, under the decision of Hyde v. Nelson, 11 [360]*360Mich. 353. But, as intent is not involved, it seems unimportant. It does not tend to disprove, but rather to confirm, the statement of the affidavit that “defendant refuses and neglects to pay plaintiff’s claim.” If it be said that it disproves it by showing that there was no debt to refuse payment of, the answer is that this would be addressed to the merits of the action, which cannot be tried in this proceeding. Genesee Co. Sav. Bank v. Michigan Barge. Co., 52 Mich. 164. See, also, 3 Enc. Pl. & Prac. 79, and cases cited; Drake, Attachm. § 418, and cases cited.

We think the findings justify the conclusion that the defendant denied liability, and refused to pay any sum upon the claim. The circuit judge must have so understood it, or he would have dissolved the attachment. The petition does not allege that the defendant had no property in Hillsdale county, nor that he was not about to remove property from there, nor that he did not refuse or neglect to pay or secure the plaintiff’s claim; nor does it state that, while he had property in that county, it was not subject to attachment. Again, it sets up no want of jurisdiction in the justice, and, had it done so, there was another way to dissolve the attachment, viz., by quashing the proceedings ; and this was done subsequently. But the petition for dissolution fairly raises the further question, viz., whether the property in transit, under the circumstances mentioned, was subject to seizure upon attachment; in other words, whether such property was, in contemplation of this statute, in Hillsdale county, or about to be removed therefrom. It also contains statements which indicate that the defendant was not indebted upon implied contract; but as to this last we have already said that the nature of the claim cannot be litigated on an application to dissolve the attachment.

“In all such cases \i. e., where the cause of action is not one upon which attachment should issue], though the plaintiff, in his affidavit for obtaining the attachment, allege a cause of action founded on contract, yet if it [361]

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.W. 289, 121 Mich. 356, 1899 Mich. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stock-v-reynolds-mich-1899.