Wood v. Baily

77 Miss. 815
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 77 Miss. 815 (Wood v. Baily) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Baily, 77 Miss. 815 (Mich. 1900).

Opinion

CauiiooN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is conceded by appellant that his attachment'proceedings were void.

The affidavit is simply as to the debt, and states no grounds [818]*818whatever for the issuance of the writ, and it is made by appellant before his own father, who was a justice of the peace, who also' issued the writ.

The only pretense of a bond is merely the condition of one which does not promise to pay anything to anybody.

The writ recites, what is not shown in the record, that plaintiff had made oath that defendants are “nonresident,” but even it does not say “nonresidents of this state,” and it commanded the seizure of timber of defendants, and this the constable proceeded, to do. Defendants replevied their property, and appeared without any service of process on them, and orally moved the justice’s court to quash the proceedings, but made no actual appearance whatever to the merits. The justice of the peace apparently ignored the motion to quash, and without any trial on the merits the court rendered judgment that it “is of opinion that Bailey and Donald are indebted to plaintiff,” etc., “and that plaintiff is entitled to a lien,” etc., and “it is therefore ordered and adjudged that plaintiff do have and recover the sum of,” etc., and costs of Bailey and Donald, and fixing a lien on the timber, but because of the replevy, the judgment proceeds, “'that plaintiff do have and recover of and from said sureties [on the replevin bond] said sum,” with interest and costs. The judgment, after thus disposing of the joint liability of Bailey and Donald, then proceeds to award a judgment against Donald alone for a separate liability of his to plaintiff.

The lien fixed by the judgment on the timber on the joint liability of Bailey and Donald is stated in the judgment to be because they owe plaintiff as the “assignee of certain laborers for labor performed upon timber levied upon herein,” thus converting an attachment for debt into a proceeding ‘to enforce laborers’ liens.

The defendants appealed to the circuit court, but before the trial on the appeal, Donald died in another county. The [819]*819circuit, court, on defendant’s motion, promptly, and very properly, dismissed tbe attachment issue, but ordered a trial on the merits. Immediately on this order Bailey filed his affidavit that neither he nor Donald were, when the attachment issued, and were not then, residents of the county of Grenada, the county of the venue, but bona fide residents of Tallahatchie county, and prayed abatement of the proceedings. Thereupon the cause seems to have proceeded to trial without objection on the issue of residence. It is clear that Bailey was a resident of Tallahatchie, and it seems fairly certain that Donald really claimed his residence there, though he was a raftsman, with a board shanty on his floating logs, which shanty, at points his raft might float him, he called his home, in so far as saying he was going home when he was absent from it in the neighborhood. But certain it is that he was a registered voter in Tallahatchie county, and from that county he had floated the timber levied on, and in that county it had been cut.

Among the witnesses was Wood, in his own behalf, who says that, notwithstanding his writ of attachment puts the proceedings on the ground of nonresidence, Donald was living in Grenada county when he sued it out, and that it was the consta-stable’s fault that he was not served with process.

The court charged the jury to find for defendant, Baily, the case having been dismissed as to Donald, who was shown to be dead, and Wood appeals from the judgment on that verdict, and says that the instruction was erroneous, and that the court again erred in refusing to instruct peremptorily for him, and his counsel make five several contentions, urged with great skill and adroitness.

But he must stand or fall on his third or fourth position. These are, in effect, that, notwithstanding the attachment proceedings were void, still the replevying of the property by defendants making a replevy bond, and their appearance by counsel in moving to quash the attachment, gave the justice of the [820]*820peace jurisdiction to try the case in personam, and he relies on Phillips v. Hines, 38 Miss., 164; Richard v. Mooney, 39 Miss., 357; and Bates v. Crow, 57 Miss., 676.

The whole question must be solved by the statute (code, § 172), and the application of the authorities mentioned to the facts of this case. It will be observed that not one of these authorities is based on a void proceeding by attachment, but only on a valid or irregular and amendable proceeding. The statute, § 172 in the attachment chapter, is this: “If the issue on a plea in abatement be found for the defendant, the attachment shall be thereby discharged, and all property seized under it, and all persons summoned as garnishees shall be released from it; but the action, unless dismissed by the plaintiff, shall be proceeded with in all respects as if it had been an ordinary action in its commencement.”

Now, in the case at bar there was no “issue on a plea in abatement” at all before the justice of the peace. No such issue was “found for the defendant.” The oral motion to quash was a direct attach on the jurisdiction. There being no jurisdiction, the whole superstructure fell, and the situation was one of hopeless paralysis of the court, and no amendment was asked for, even if it was amendable, and we cannot; hold that an actual appearance merely to urge an absolute want of jurisdiction can give the court power to hold the defendant for further proceeding. If our ruling be correct as to this, it follows that the whole matter was a nullity in both the lower courts, and that the circuit judge did not err in dismissing it from court, and, we think, he should have sustained the original motion to dismiss.

In executing the replevy bond the defendants were in no worse condition than if personally served with process, and on personal service we hold he could have moved to quash the void in rem proceeding, which motion, if sustained, as it should have been, would not compel him to appear and contest the debt.

[821]*821All that we decide in tliis case is that the affidavit in attachment is a nullity, that everything depending on it is a nullity: the Avrit is therefore a nullity, the IeAry on the property is a nullity, and the replevy bond executed by the defendants Avas a nullity, and could import nothing, not even an appearance, and that being nothing, neither a justice of the peace, nor a circuit nor supreme court can make something out of nothing. It follorvs that, the final result in the circuit court Avas correct, and the case is 1

Á /firmed.

suggestion OR ERROR.

After the delivery of the foregoing opinion, 'William 0. McLean, for appellant, presented the following suggestion of error:

It is conceded that the attachment proceedings were void. Yet this in no way affects the jurisdiction of the court to' try the personal action. It will be conceded that, if defendants had been personally served Avith process, the justice of the peace Avould have acquired jurisdiction of the person so as to entitle plaintiff to a personal judgment against the defendants, although the attachment proceedings were absolutely void. We urge that, since the property levied upon was bonded, this ipso facto

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Related

Bates v. Crow
57 Miss. 676 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1880)
Edwards v. Gaulding
38 Miss. 118 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1859)
Richard v. Mooney
39 Miss. 357 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1860)

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Bluebook (online)
77 Miss. 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-baily-miss-1900.