Thompson v. Gilmore

50 Me. 428
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 Me. 428 (Thompson v. Gilmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Gilmore, 50 Me. 428 (Me. 1861).

Opinions

The opinion of a majority of the Court was drawn up by

Tenney, C. J.

The plaintiff seeks to obtain a judgment against the defendant, as the former sheriff of the county of Penobscot, for the default of Daniel Jacobs, his deputy, for not delivering, on a demand made by a person legally authorized to receive them, certain logs attached on the [430]*430plaintiff’s writ, by said deputy, and returned thereon by him, against William‘L. Lambert and Stephen L. Cowan, on which he claimed to have a lien for services, in driving the same from Eagle lake, so that they could be seized and sold by the officer, who had the execution recovered in the action in which the attachment was made.

Many objections are made by the defendant to the maintenance of this suit, which appertain to the proceedings in the original action against Lambert and Oowan, while it was pending in this Court; one of which is a denial of any valid judgment against the logs in question, on the ground that the record furnishes no evidence that the owners of the logs were notified of the pendency of the' suit in which the logs were claimed by virtue of a lien, excepting by the appearance of an attorney for certain persons, represented by him, as claiming to be owners. If the attempt to remove this objection by the plaintiff’s counsel by argument were successful, another matter disclosed -in the case deserves consideration.

The case finds that the alleged debtors of the plaintiff in the suit did not own the logs in question. And a very material point involved in the case, is, whether the record shows a valid judgment in rem against the logs, so that the defendant’s deputy, Jacobs, was legally bound to deliver them on the demand made within thirty days after judgment, by the officer who had the execution. In ordinary actions of assumpsit against a party, to obtain a judgment, in personam, the plaintiff alleges in his writ, in legal form, certain facts touching the contract and its non-performance, &c., by the defendant. A default of the defendant is an admission of the defendant that the facts alleged are true, and that thereon the law awards judgment in that suit. 3 Black. Com., 396. If the plaintiff, in addition to the judgment in personam, seeks a judgment in rem by virtue of a lien, under the statute, which is invoked in this case, on account of having performed labor upon the property, on which the lien is claimed, it can be done only by an attachment which [431]*431he causes to be made of the property upon which his services were rendered, and upon a writ which he sues out for the double purpose of obtaining a judgment against his alleged debtors, and against the property itself. And the settled construction of the statute, as declared in the case of Bicknell v. Trickey, 34 Maine, 273, is,- — "No other property is liable, except that upon which the lien attaches.”— " The identity of the claim and the property must co-exist, and must be traceable till the fruits of the judgment have been obtained by a satisfaction of the execution. The identity of the property must be established, else the lien cannot attach; the labor must be shown to have been done upon the specific property raised, for provision is made for nothing else.”

What then must be established as the basis of a judgment in rem, in such cases ? It cannot bo doubted that it must be made to appear in some mode that the labor has been performed by the plaintiff in the case, under a contract, express or implied, with the other contracting party, the debtor, and whatever ir ay be necessary to entitle him to a judgment in permnam; and that this labor has been done upon the property directed to be attached, and which has been attached on his writ, and a return thereof made upon the same by the‘officer, who had it for service. Whatever is alleged in the writ, which is material and properly stated, by the alleged debtor’s default, he having had legal notice of the suit, is admitted to be true. But no presumption arises from the default, whether the defendant has appeared or not, that he admits the existence of other facts, not in any manner stated in the writ. And, from the provisions of the statute which we are considering, it is manifest, under the construction already referred to, that a judgment in rem cannot be rendered against the property, without proof of other facts, which, from the nature of the case, cannot be alleged in the writ. The attachment of the propei'ty is necessarily subsequent to the purchase of the writ. Whether the property attached and returned is identical with that, in [432]*432all respects, on which the labor was performed, as the basis of the lien, although it may have marks in common with that which is not attached, the officer’s return has no tendency to establish. The identity must be proved aliunde. Hence this latter proof cannot be supplied by a default of any one, who can be treated as a party, at any stage of the proceedings.

In the writ in favor of the plaintiff against Lambert and Cowan, the party with whom he contracted to drive certain logs, there is the direction to attach the property of the latter, and also ten lots of logs, described by their several marks, lying in the Allegash and Penobscot rivers, to the value of one hundred and eighty dollars, &c. After the usual part of the writ* follows, — "to answer unto James Thompson in a plea of the case, for that the plaintiff heretofore, to wit, during the summer and spring of the year 1854, at the request of said defendants, labored in said State of Maine, at driving on the Allegash and Penobscot rivers, and their tributaries, towards the Penobscot boom, certain logs and lumber, of the. following marks, to wit,” [marks similar to those on the logs which the officer was directed to attach,] "and the sum and balance actually due, and unpaid of the amount stipulated, by the defendant to be paid to the plaintiff, for his personal service thereon was and is the sum of eighty dollars and thirty-nine cents, as specified.in the annexed account, and, in consideration of the premises, said defendants, at said Bangor, on the day of the purchase .of this writ, promised the plaintiff to pay him said last named sum on demand; and the plaintiff claims a lien upon said logs and lumber, under the laws of this State, for said sum, so due, and brings this suit, to enforce, and secure the same.”

The record, after reciting the allegations in the writ, and that, at the term of the Court when the writ was returned and action entered, notice was ordered, &o., and that an appearance was entered at a subsequent term by an attorney of the Court, for certain persons named, it proceeds,— [433]*433"Now the plaintiff appears, but the defendants, although called to come into Court, &c., do not appear, but make default. It is therefore considered by the Court, that the said James Thompson recover against the said William L. Lambert and Stephen L. Cowan, and against said logs, the sum of eighty-eight dollars and seventy cents, debt or damage, and costs of suit, taxed at twenty-nine dollars and ninety cents'.”

The defendant insists, that the call of the "defendants” and their non-appearance thereon, can apply only to the debtors — and can have no reference to the logs or their owners.

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

Related

Webb v. Webb
2005 ME 91 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Me. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-gilmore-me-1861.