West Cove Grain Co. v. Bartley

74 A. 730, 105 Me. 293, 1909 Me. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 74 A. 730 (West Cove Grain Co. v. Bartley) 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
West Cove Grain Co. v. Bartley, 74 A. 730, 105 Me. 293, 1909 Me. LEXIS 96 (Me. 1909).

Opinion

Peabody, J.

This is an action of debt on a poor debtor’s bond brought by the plaintiff against the defendant, Bartley, as principal, and the sureties thereon. The bond is dated March 23rd, 1907, and was given to obtain release of the principal from arrest on a capias issued by Calvin W. Brown, Judge of Probate and ex officio disclosure commissioner for Piscataquis County.

The case is before this court on an agreed statement of facts.

The plaintiff, whose place of business was Bangor in the County of Penobscot, recovered judgment against the defendant, Bartley, who was a resident of Milo in Piscataquis County, at the October Term, 1906, of the Supreme Judicial Court, Penobscot County. The judgment was dated October 19th, 1906, and upon it execution issued and an alias execution was issued February 2nd, 1907. B. W. Blanchard of Bangor was attorney of record for the plaintiff and his name was endorsed upon the executions. The execution of February 2nd, 1907 was forwarded by Blanchard to W. A. Johnson, an' attorney at law in Milo, for collection with the instructions to institute disclosure proceedings if necessary, who after demand upon the debtor, made an application to Harvey J. Cross of Sebee in the County of Piscataquis, a disclosure commissioner, for a subpoena to command the debtor to appear before him and disclose. Cross had an office at Dover, in the County of Piscataquis, where he did business as a disclosure commissioner. There was no disclosure commissioner in the town of Milo, the place of the debtor’s residence, and Sebee is nearer to that town than Dover. Cross issued a subpoena, which was duly served, commanding the debtor to appear before him at his office in Dover, March 22nd, 1907, and at that time and place the debtor appeared.

The disclosure commissioner being unable to. be present had requested the Judge of Probate as disclosure commissioner to be [296]*296present and take the disclosure, and he appeared at the time and place mentioned in subpoena for that purpose and a hearing was had before him.

The debtor’s counsel at the hearing objected that B. W. Blanchard was the attorney of record for the plaintiff, while the petition was signed by W. A. Johnson, as attorney for the plaintiff. The commissioner overruled the objection, and the debtor was then examined by the counsel for the creditor, by the commissioner and by his own counsel. At the close of the hearing the debtor’s counsel moved that the oath be administered to the debtor, but the commissioner refused to administer it and issued a capias dated March 22nd, 1907, which was attached to the execution of February 2nd, 1907.

Upon the capias the debtor was arrested and gave the bond upon which this action is brought.

The defense is made upon two grounds; 1. The petition for subpoena to bring the debtor before the disclosure commissioner was void because it was not signed by the creditor or its attorney. 2. The debtor should have been brought before the disclosure commissioner in the town of Sebee where he was a resident and not in a different town where he had his office.

We think the first ground of defense is not tenable. The attorney of record in the original suit prosecuted the claim against the debtor to judgment and placed the execution of February 2nd, 1907, in the hands of a local attorney of the town where the defendant resided, for collection. He demanded payment of the judgment debt and it being refused, he applied as attorney of the plaintiff to the commissioner nearest the town where the defendant resided for a subpoena commanding the debtor to appear at a fixed time and place and to disclose as provided by statute. This commissioner had jurisdiction of the proceeding, and the application being made to him by an attorney at law having in his possession the execution representing the debt of the creditor and assuming to be his attorney, he took action upon it by issuing a subpoena.

The case shows that so far as the attorney of record could appoint the local attorney without express direction of the plaintiff, he had [297]*297done so. No protest was made nor any issue as to the fact of the appointment was raised until the time fixed for the disclosure, when the debtor’s counsel objected to the validity of the proceedings, because the execution showed that Blanchard was the judgment creditor’s attorney of record. This objection the magistrate overruled. The statute does not restrict the attorney who may apply for the subpoena to the creditor’s attorney of record or an attorney authorized by power of attorney. The magistrate found as fact that Johnson was the attorney of the creditor, and the finding is not reviewablé in this action, provided the disclosure commissioner had jurisdiction at the time and place named in the subpoena which will be later considered. Cannon v. Seveno et als., 78 Maine, 307: Shields v. Sheffields, 79 Ala. 91: Debavin v. Funke, 142 N. Y. 633. The fact that Johnson had the execution legally in his hands for collection is prima facie evidence of his authority to act as attorney for the judgment creditor, and the burden of showing he was not authorized was upon the debtor. Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Pinner, 43 N. Y. Eq. 52: Bonnifield v. Thorp, 71 Fed. Rep. 924.

The second ground of defense involves, 1. the construction of R. S., chapter 114, section 23, as amended by chapters 131 and 134 of the Public Laws of 1905 and the Public Laws of 1907, chapter 2. 2. the question of waiver by the debtor.

The amendment by the Public Laws of 1907, in force at the time of the application for subpoena in this case, seems to have introduced a material change as to disclosure commissioners to whom applications for subpoenas may be made in disclosure proceedings, and the towns in which the debtors are to appear before such magistrate to make disclosure. The language of the amended statute "Such magistrate shall thereupon issue under his hand and seal a subpoena to the debtor, commanding him to appear before such magistrate within said county, in the town in which the debtor, the petitioner or his attorney, resides, and in case there is no such magistrate in the town where the debtor, the petitioner or his attorney, resides, then in the town where there is such a magistrate [298]*298nearest to the place of residence of the debtor, the petitioner or his attorney, at the time and place therein named, to make full and true disclosure, on oath, of all his business and property affairs,” fairly indicates that the defendant should have been brought before the magistrate in Sebee; the statute should be construed to mean the town where the magistrate resides rather that where his office is located.

This construction is aided by the associated section 19, providing for the appointment and- certain requirements of disclosure commissioners for different localities, "They shall have an official seal which shall have engraved thereon the name of the commissioner, the words ‘disclosure commissioner’ and the word ‘Maine’ and the name of the county, and the town or city where the commissioner resides.” In this case the commission appointing Cross, named him "Harvey J. Cross of Sebee.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 730, 105 Me. 293, 1909 Me. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-cove-grain-co-v-bartley-me-1909.