Wilson v. Pierce

30 F. Cas. 150, 15 Law Rep. 137
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F. Cas. 150 (Wilson v. Pierce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Pierce, 30 F. Cas. 150, 15 Law Rep. 137 (N.D. Cal. 1852).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

This was a libel in the admiralty, founded on an alleged breach of a maritime contract. The libel, after setting out the cause of action, prays that process in due form of law, according to the course of this court in cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction in suits in perso-nam, may issue against the said defendant, to compel him to appear and answer on oath, all and singular, the matters, &c.; and that the court will be pleased to decree that the said defendant pay to the said libellant his damages, and that the said libellant be satisfied out of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements, moneys and credits of said defendant in the hands of Upham & Post, (garnishees,) and for his costs and charges. Process of foreign attachment issued in accordance with the prayer of the libel, and tne marshal returned that the defendant was not found, and that he had attached his credits and effects in the hands of the garnishees named. To this process the defendant, by his proctor, appeared under protest to the jurisdiction, and filed his exceptions to the libel, on the ground that the defendant is a citizen of another state, and now domiciliated therein.

It is not claimed that the defendant was an inhabitant of this district, or that he was found here at the time of serving the writ. The important question then to be determined, is: Can a process of foreign attachment legally issue in the admiralty against a citizen and inhabitant of the United States, in any other district than that whereof he is an inhabitant, or in which he shall be found at the time of serving the writ? The proceeding by way of foreign attachment, which in England rests only on the customs of London and Exeter, is demonstrated by the court in Manro v. Almeida, 10 Wheat. [23 U. S.] 473, to be a familiar and authorized method of exercising admiralty jurisdiction. It does not owe its origin to any local customs of England, but it is derived from the same sources as [151]*151those which furnish the other elements- of admiralty powers. The authority, therefore, to attach the property of non-residents, which in court of common law results either from -special custom or statutory provisions, (Com. Dig. “Attachment,” B, D) in this court is derived from the usages and practice of courts of admiralty and civil law, which, as contra-distinguished from those of courts of common law, regulate the modes of proceeding in the maritime tribunals of the United States. Act 1792.

The supreme court, in the case above cited, in deciding that the process of foreign attachment has the clearest sanction in the practice of the civil law, rely not only on the fact that it has been resorted to in one, at least, of the courts of the United States,—McGrath v. The Candalero [Case No. 8,809]; McGrath v. The Candalero [Id. 8,810]; Bouysson v. Miller [Id. 1,709]; Ryan v. The Cato [Id. 12,184],—but also on the explicit declaration of a work of respectable authority and remote origin, which has been universally recognised as among the best books on the practice of admiralty courts. In Clerke, Praxis Adm. (pt. 2, tit. 28), it is said: “If the defendant has concealed himself, or has absconded from the kingdom so that he cannot be arrested, if he have any goods, merchandise, ship, or vessel, on the sea or within the ebb and flow of the sea, and within the jurisdiction of the lord high admiral, a warrant is to be impe-traied to this effect, viz: to attach such goods or ship of D., the defendant, in whose hands soever they may be, and to cite the said D. specially as the owner, and all others who claim any right or title to them, to be and appear, on a certain day to answer unto P. in a civil and maritime cause.”

By comparing the foregoing extract with the decision of which it forms the basis, it will be seen that the supreme court held that the process of foreign attachment might issue against the credits and effects of an absconding debtor who had fled beyond the jurisdiction, and against whom no means of redress remained unless by process of attachment. Such, in fact, were the allegations of the libel, and by the marshal's return it appears that the monition had been served by leaving a copy at the “late dwelling-house of Almeida, the defendant” The case of a similar process, against an “inhabitant” of the United States and a resident of another district, was not before the court. Dr. Brown, however, in his treatise on Civil and Admiralty Law, (volume 2, p. 434,) speaks of the easy and effective remedy (by process of foreign attachment), provided by the ancient practice of the admiralty court in cases where the person against whom a warrant has issued cannot be found, or lives in a foreign country. This proceeding, though not authorized according to Huberus, (Huberus de in Jus Vocando,) by the example of the civil law, he commends as salutary and effective; and though in latter times it has fallen into disuse in England, he laments the great mischief accruing to commerce from the want of it. Browne, Civ. & Adm. Law, ubi supra. If, then, the point to be decided were, whether the process of foreign attachment is in accordance with the principles, rules and usages of courts of admiralty, the case of Manro v. Almeida [supra], as well as those of Bouysson v. Miller [supra], and The Invincible [Case No. 7,054], would leave no room for doubt.

But it is urged that the prohibition contained in the 11th section of the judiciary act of 1789 presents an insuperable obstacle to the exercise of jurisdiction in the case under consideration. By that section it is provided that “No person shall be arrested in one district for trial in another, in any civil action, before a circuit or district court, and no civil suit shall be brought before either of said courts against an inhabitant of the United States, by any original process, in any other district than that whereof he is an inhabitant, or in which he shall be found at the time of serving the writ.” It is not denied that the defendant in this case is an inhabitant of the United States, and that he is not an inhabitant of this district, nor is it asserted that he has been found within it at the time of serving the writ. If this proceeding had been instituted on the common law side of this court against a defendant similarly situated, there can be no doubt that the court would have been without jurisdiction. In the case of Picquet v. Swan [Case No. 11,134], it was concluded, after an elaborate investigation by Judge Story, that the process of foreign attachment, though in accordance with the local practice, could not issue from the circuit court against a defendant, unless he were in the one or the other predicament stated in the clause of the judiciary act above cited,— that is, unless he were either an inhabitant of the district or found within it, and this doctrine was affirmed by the supreme court in Toland v. Sprague, 12 Pet. [37 U. S.] 300.

If, then, the restriction contained in the ju-. diciary act applies to civil suits at common law before the circuit courts of the United States, does the same prohibition apply to a civil suit before the district court in admiralty? It may be urged that the jurisdiction and modes of proceeding of the admiralty courts of the United States, rest exclusively on the grant in the constitution, and the rules furnished by the process act of 1789 and 1792; —that as, by those acts, the forms of proceeding are required to be according to the practice of the civil law and the rules and usages of courts of admiralty, and as the writ of foreign attachment is in accordance with such practice, rules and usages, the prohibition clause of the judiciary act has no application. But by the same process act (29th Sept.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 150, 15 Law Rep. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-pierce-cand-1852.