Hatch v. Lawrence
Hatch v. Lawrence
Opinion of the Court
One of the conditions required by the statute in a bond given upon the arrest of a debtor on execution is, that he “ will within six months thereafter, cite the creditor before two justices of the peace and of the quorum, and submit himself to examination, and take the oath prescribed,” &c. R. S. chap. 148, <§> 20.
By the terms alone of this condition in the bond the forfeiture would be saved by its performance.
But if the statute by virtue of which the bond is given, requires in certain cases, that the debtor shall do something further, after he has taken the oath, to make the performance
One object of the statute in providing for the disclosure of a debtor arrested on execution is, that the creditor may know his pecuniary means, and if property subject to attachment is disclosed, what it is, and where it may be found, that it may be taken and disposed of, in partial or full satisfaction of the debt.
If the debtor should take the oath and receive the certificate, both in the forms prescribed in the Revised Statutes, chap. 148, sections 27 and 32, after having disclosed attachable property within his own control, (although the creditor may have a lien upon it,) and should fraudulently dispose of it, or omit to surrender it on a legal demand, so as to deprive the creditor of the benefit contemplated, the purposes of the disclosure would be lost to him, provided the oath notwithstanding should prevent a forfeiture. It is true, that by the latter part of the thirty-fourth section of the same chapter, another remedy is provided in such an event, but which may prove inadequate, where the debtor may again and again elude the vigilance of the creditor and protect the property, which it may appear by his oath, he may own and possess, and which is subject to be raised on execution, if it can be reached. But the former part of the same section provides that the debtor shall receive no benefit from the certificate, if he shall transfer, conceal, or otherwise dispose of the personal property, which he shall have disclosed, and which is subject to attachment, within the term of thirty days after the disclosure, and the time, when the certificate shall be given, or suffer the same to be done, or shall refuse to surrender the same on demand of any proper officer, having an execution on the same judgment within the same time. The question presented is, whether such fraudulent acts or omission, shall cause a forfeiture of the bond.
The certificate is merely the evidence of the proceedings recited therein ; it is the latter alone which really confers the benefit upon the debtor, and if they can be legally shown by other evidence, they will have the same validity as when shown
This is not a new question. The same point was presented to the whole Court in the case of Wiggin v. Davis & al. in the county of Somerset in 1846, and after argument it was held, that a breach of the bond had taken place.
It is contended that the bond is not in conformity to the statute, therefore the provisions of the R. S. chap. 148, section 34, do not apply. No copy of the bond has been furnished and it is not the duty of the Court to provide papers, which • the parties have omitted to obtain. Wood v. Wyman & al. 25
The cause must stand for the assessment of damages according to the statute of 1848, entitled “an act additional for the relief of poor debtors.”
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.