Union Sugar Refinery v. Mathiesson

24 F. Cas. 680, 2 Cliff. 304
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 680 (Union Sugar Refinery v. Mathiesson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Sugar Refinery v. Mathiesson, 24 F. Cas. 680, 2 Cliff. 304 (circtdma 1864).

Opinion

CLIFFORD. Circuit Justice.

Under the provisions of the eleventh section of the judiciary act (1 Stat. 79), it is clearly the right of the plaintiff to serve the defendant with process in the district where the plaintiff resides, provided the process be in proper form, and the defendant be found in that district, within the true intent and meaning of that provision. The argument of the defendant admits the proposition as stated, and it is so obvious that it is correct that the statement of it furnishes all the explanation that is required in its support. Withdraw that right .from the plaintiff, and the consequence would immediately follow that a defendant, although a citizen of another state, might evade service indefinitely by fleeing into the district where the plaintiff resides, and by remaining there until he could secrete or convey all his property, might defeat all means of rendering available any judgment which the plaintiff might recover against him in the federal courts. The right secured, therefore, by the provision, is plainly one of importance, and one that ought not to be impaired or frittered away by construction. Important as the right is. however, it must not be forgotten that it is conferred only under the special circumstances described in the provision, and if those circumstances are wanting, then the right does not exist. When the party defendant is found in such district, he may then be lawfully served with process; but it • cannot be said that he was so found there, it he was inveigled or enticed into the district for the purpose of making such service upon him, by false representations and deceitful contrivances of the plaintiff in the suit, or by any one acting in his behalf. Abuse of legal process in any form has always been frowned upon by courts of justice, whenever and wherever the fact has been made to appear, and the party practis-ing it is never allowed to reap the fruits of his wrongful act. Where the defendant was first arrested without process, and detained until process could be procured, and while so unlawfully detained was served with legal process, it was held that inasmuch as the original arrest was illegal, the subsequent confinement under legal process was also illegal; and the defendant accordingly was unconditionally discharged. Barlow v. Hall, 2 Anstr. 461. The arrest was also held illegal, and the defendant discharged, in Birch v. Prodger, 1 Bos. & P. (N. R.) 135, because the defendant was first seized by the plaintiff in the street, and carried by him to the office of an attorney, and there detained until the process already issued and in the hands of the officer could be sent for and served. See. also, Loveridge v. Plaistow, 2 H. Bl. 29. The general rule, however, is that a person illegally in custody at the suit of one party, is not privileged from arrest at the suit of another, unless there'is some proof of concert of collusion; because, in the absence of such proof it cannot be assumed that the latter party has been guilty of any abuse of legal process or of any wrongful act whatever. Barclay v. Faber, 2 Barn. & Ald. 743; Howson v. Walker, 2 W. Bl. 823; Davies v. Chippendale, 2 Bos. & P. 282; Egginton’s Case, 2 El. & Bl. 735. The rule, of course, would be otherwise if the party was not subject to arrest, as is admitted in all the cases establishing the preceding general rule. Spence v. Stuart, 3 East, 89. Improper contrivance also, as well as a prior illegal arrest and subsequent detention, will render the service illegal, and entitle the defendant to an unconditional discharge. Consequently, where a respondent in an equity suit was in contempt for not filing an answer, and . the complainant having procured an order of attachment against him, and being unable to serve it, caused the respondent to be personally examined in certain insolvent proceedings pending against him in another tribunal, and as the respondent retired from the room after his examination, served him with the attachment process, it was held that the arrest was illegal, and that he should be discharged, because he had been arrested by a deceptive and improper contrivance. Snelling v. Watrous, 2 Paige, 314. The same principle is also laid down in Wells v. Gurney. 8 Barn. & C. 769, where it was held that a defendant, arrested on Sunday for an assault actually committed, but for the real purpose of detaining the defendant until Monday, so that he might be arrested in a civil suit, was entitled to a discharge from the arrest in the civil suit, because the arrest had been effected by an abuse of legal process and by deceptive means. Courts of justice everywhere regard the procurement and use of one legal process merely for the purpose of arresting a party and detaining him in custody until he can be served with another process, as such an abuse of process as will at least render the second service utterly unavailing to the party making it; and cases may be found where it has been held that the party arrested was entitled to be discharged from both upon an ex parte application to the court. Ex parte [682]*682Wilson, 1 Atk. 152. Whether or not the rule ought to be extended so far, it is not necessary now to determine, but it is clear that the service of the latter process in the case stated was illegal, and was properly set aside. Several eases also are cited by the defendant, in which it was held that if a party upon whom process is served, and who at the time was residing in another jurisdiction, was induced to come into the jurisdiction of the court where the suit was commenced, by a deception practised upon him by the plaintiff for the purpose of serving the process, such service is not good, and that the court will set it aside and dismiss the suit. Such were the views of the court in Williams v. Reed, 5 Dutch. [29 N. J. Law] 385, which is a case directly in point under the theory. of fact set forth in the motion. Express adjudication to the same effect is also to be found in Carpenter v. Spooner, 2 Sandf. 717, which is entitled to much weight. An examination of these eases and others cited by the defendant satisfies the court that the proposition of the defendant, as stated in the motion, is correct that, where the defendant, residing in another district, is inveigled, enticed, and induced to come into the district where the plaintiff resides, by the false representations or deceptive contrivances of the plaintiff, or of any one acting in his behalf, for the purpose of serving legal px-ocess upon the defendant, and the pame is served through such improper means, such service is illegal and ought to be set aside, and that the process should be dismissed. But the proofs in this case do not show that the defendant was first seized without process, and detained until process could be obtained and served, nor that he was arrested and held upon process obtained for the mere purpose of so arresting and detaining him until the process in question could be obtained, and served upon him. In or do the proofs show that the plaintiff's or any one in their behalf, were guilty of any misrepresentations or practised any deceptive contrivances to entice or inveigle the defendant into this district to serve him with the process under consideration. All these conclusions of fact are admitted by the defendant, and, in admitting them, he also admits, in the view of the court, that his motion must be denied.

[Foi subsequent proceedings, see Cases Nos. 14.398 and 14.399.]

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 680, 2 Cliff. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-sugar-refinery-v-mathiesson-circtdma-1864.