Jacobs v. Burrows
Jacobs v. Burrows
Opinion of the Court
The second and third sections of the “Act to extend relief to debtors, and to prevent the sacrifice of property at public sales,” which was originally passed in 1861, (13 Stat. 18,) are made obscure by an effort at condensatiijn. Some parts of them are of general application; some relate to mesne process only; some to. final process only; some to process against property, mesne or final; and some to process against the person, mesne or final. We have been greatly aided by the very clear expositions of these sections given in' argument here by Mr. G. W. Williams, of counsel for the appellants; and we think that the meaning can be ascertained so as to give effect to every word, to adapt to every case the provisions intended for it, and to carry out the intention of the Legislature.
The first section of the Act makes it, in general, unlawful for any officer to serve or execute any process, mesne or final. The second and third regulate some special exceptions. They do not originate any new process, nor dispense with any requisites before applicable to process then existing; but they prescribe an additional condition for the efficacy of any process, and somewhat regulate proceedings thereunder. The additional condition is, that the plaintiff, his agent or attorney-at-law, shall make affidavit before a Clerk of Court that his debtor is in at least one of the five following predicaments: 1. Has absconded. 2. Is about to abscond. 3. Is removing his property beyond the limits of the State. 4. Is about to remove his property beyond such limits; or, 5. Is fraudulently disposing of his property. Before the affidavit, the plaintiff may sue out process, mesne or final, as he might have done before the Act; but the Sheriff or other executive officer (constable or coroner) is prohibited from obeying it. When the affidavit is made and attached to the process, the Clerk makes a copy of it on a copy of the process, or on a separate paper, and, subjoins thereto a notice' requiring the
Now, we will distinguish between the different kinds of process, and see what provisions are applicable to each. The mesne process, in contemplation of the Legislature, were such as required the Sheriff to take the body or the property of the defendant — not a summons or capias acl respondendum without order for bail, for these latter were inadequate for either of the predicaments which the additional affidavit must specify, and could give to the Sheriff no authority for what he is required to do. Foreign attachment, domestic attachment, and bail-writ were of mesne process in contemplation, as were also, of final process, fi. fa. and ca. sa.
If the plaintiff sues out attachment, foreign or domestic, no preliminary nor observance previously required is dispensed with by the,Act: bond, affidavits, resort to a magistrate in proper cases, all must be attended to as before. After the additional affidavit, which the Act requires, has been attached to the process, the proper officer levies, serves garnishees, and
If the plaintiff sues out an ordinary bail-writ, or a bail-writ under the Act of 1839, relating to cases of debts not due, or an order for bail pending an action under the Acts of 1827 and 1839, he must begin, and to some extent proceed, as he would in a like case have done before the Act of -1861, to make effective the process he desires. After the additional affidavit has been annexed to his process, the Sheriff may immediately arrest the defendant. The notice which the Clerk
With respect to final process, the provisions of the sections under examination are, for fi.fa., similar to those for attachment, and for ca. sa. similar to those for bail-writ; except that “the amount of the judgment on which such final process is based” is, for the penalty of the bond, doubled, instead of “ the amount of the sum sued for,” and that the time, in the notice given by the Clerk for delivery of property or body to the Sheriff, is instead of “the time át which judgment may be obtained on such debt,” at the time limited for the operation of the Act of 1861, continued as it has since been.
The notice given by the Clerk in the case before us, and the bond taken, are not in conformity with the Act which required them. The motions of the appellants are therefore granted — the order or notice of the Clerk is set aside, and the bond given thereunder is directed to be cancelled.
Motions granted.
Motions granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.