The Rockford, Rock Island and St. Louis Railroad v. Boody
The Rockford, Rock Island and St. Louis Railroad v. Boody
Opinion of the Court
The defendant contends that both the order of arrest and the warrant oí attachment issued in this case were irregular or illegal, so that the court ought to have set aside both, upon the ground that both remedies could not lawfully be allowed in the same suit. Upon his application to set aside both, the court at Special Term required the
The case of Chappel v. Skinner (6 How. Pr., 338) is not an authority in conflict with the views above stated. That was held to be an action for damages for wrongfully taking, detaining or converting property, and not an action to recover the possession of personal property. So considered, the plaintiff was held to be entitled to have the defendant arrested, under subdivision 1 of section 179 of the Code, as had been done, and therefore not entitled to claim the immediate delivery of the property, as in an action to recover the possession of personal property, under sections 206 and following. In the course of the opinion it was pointed out that the statute itself marked the distinction between the action to recover damages for the wrongful taking or detaining of property, and that to recover possession of personal property. The general words of subdivision 1 of section 179 having, therefore, no application to an action to recover the possession of personal property, it was necessary, if an arrest was to be allowed at all in such an action, that special provision should be made defining the cases in which it should be allowed. This has been done in the third subdivision. All the argument that can be drawn from it is, that the legislature has defined the cases in which an arrest may be had. It affords no inference that an arrest may not be had in any case falling within the terms of the statute.
The election which the plaintiff had, in the case cited, was between an action for damages with a right to an arrest under subdivision 1 of section 179, and an action to recover the possession of personal property with the right to claim its deli
This case, certainly, affords no ground for saying that the party is not entitled to any and every remedy which the statute fairly interpreted gives him. Nor do I perceive that the analogies drawn from the practice anterior to the Code are of force sufficient to lead to the conclusion of absolute incompatibility between the remedies by arrest and attachment. In respect to mesne process the old practice afforded no ground of comparison. In final process there were cases where the body or the goods could be taken; but, the taking of the body was a satisfaction, as was also the taking of sufficient property, and therefore they were not allowed together. The principle was that double satisfaction should not be allowed. But this is a very different matter from process, the object of which is to obtain security that the defendant shall abide the event of the judgment either by his body or by his goods, or by both. It may be that the Supreme Court has a discretion to limit a party to the one or the other when either is ample or sufficient, in its judgment. Such a discretion has been exercised in this case, and we are not called upon to deny or affirm its existence. To avail the defendant he must maintain that arrest and attachment are so inconsistent in their nature that, where both are simultaneously allowed in proper form by a judge of the Supreme Court, they are both void from the beginning. We do not find in the argument derived from the statute, nor in any of the eases to which we have been referred, any warrant for this position. The cases in respect to mesne process, of which Brinley v. Allen (3 Mass., 561); Miller v. Miller (25 Maine, 110), and Trafton v. Gardiner (39 id., 501) may be taken as fair instances, will be found to turn upon the form of the process in use in those States, the command of which is in the alternative, and of course excludes the enforcement of both branches of the command. These do not, in my judgment,
Upon the merits of the case very little need be said in addition to the opinion of Judge Daniels, at Special Term. The responsibility of the defendant rests upon the fiduciary relation which he sustained to the railroad corporation plaintiff in this action. The device by which, through the medium of his connection with William Irvin & Co., he procured and appropriated to his own use the $32,000, does not subtantially differ in its moral or legal aspects from that by which he procured and appropriated the other sum of $215,000. Both sums were thus obtained and appropriated in fraud of the plaintiffs — not technical and constructive merely, but actual — through the abuse of powers with which he had been intrusted for the advantage of the plaintiff, and which he perverted for his own advantage. The cases are all very strong in reprobation of such conduct, • and exact of parties so situated the highest degree of faithfulness in action and of responsibility for misconduct. (Butts v. Wood, 38 Barb., 182, and 37 N. Y., 317; Cumberland Coal Co. v. Sherman, 30 Barb., 553; Gardner v. Ogden, N. Y., 332; Gaskell v. Chambers, 26 Beavan, 252; Coleman v. Second Avenue Railroad Co., 38 N. Y., 201; Port v Russell, 36 Ind., 60.)
In regard to the release alleged in the answer of the defendant, used by the plaintiff upon the motion to vacate the arrest, it appears to be infected with the same fraud which existed in the original dealings of the defendant with the plaintiff. Although read by the plaintiff it does not become conclusive evidence against it, but only competent to be considered in connection with the other matters before the court in disposing of the defendant’s application. It should not affect the result, it appearing, upon the whole case, that the complaint
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.
Order affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Rockford, Rock Island and St. Louis Railroad Company v. Henry H. Boody
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