Wiley v. Woodman
Wiley v. Woodman
Opinion of the Court
This suit was-bronght against the defendants, upon their acceptance of a draft, payable to the order of plaintiffs, for $500.
The defendants, for answer, pleaded a general denial and prayed for a judgment in their favor.
Tho Court below, after hearing tho evidence, gave judgment in favor of plaintiff, for $500, with interest and costs of suit and protest. No appeal was taken from that judgment.
But, subsequently, the defendants filed a document of tho following-tenor, and which they call a plea in bur :
“Now conic the defendants in tho above entitled suit, and to the Court aforesaid respectfully represent that tho plaintiff ought not further to prosecute tho same, or further to prosecute the writ of -fieri facias herein issued against tho defendants, because they say that the said plaintiff is an alien, horn and resident in foreign parts, to wit: the State of Missouri, ¡j,nd out of the allegiance of the State
On motion of defendants’ counsel, it was ordered by the Court below' that plaintiff show' cause on Monday, 23d April 1861, why the older prayed for should not be granted.
The plaintiff excepted to said rule, on the ground that judgment having been obtained and execution issued, the defendants cannot sot the same aside on exception, plea in abatement or rule, but only by injunction on giiv'.ng bond; that no such process or proceeding as that instituted by defendants is known under our law in such cases.
The Court below', after hearing counsel, sustained the exception of plaintiff and dismissed the rule or plea in bar filed by defendants, with costs.
The defendants appealed from that judgment.
IVe. are clearly of opinion that the District .Judge did not err. The appellants have not appeared in this Court to point out to us the law authorizing such proceedings as by them adopted to arrest the fieri facias or execution upon the judgment, and we are not aware of any laws under which said writ or execution could be arrested, except those regulating-injunctions, and requiring the party to state under oath the facts which, according- to his belief, render necessary, and to annex to his petition his bond in favor of defendant in injunction. C. P. Arts. 296, 304.
The appellee has asked for damages as for a frivolous appeal. We believe ho is entitled to them.
It is therefore ordered and decreed, that tho judgment appealed from be affirmed, with fifty dollars damages, and that the appellants pay all costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.