15 Vt. 500 | Vt. | 1843
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The affidavit offered in evidence by the plaintiff, was correctly excluded. It neither proved the fact put in issue by the plea and replication, nor was it such as the statute expressly required. This is evident, unless it can be maintained that, within the meaning of the recent statute, being about to leave the state, and, to abscond from it, are to be regarded as equivalent or synonymous expressions. But it is clear that the latter expression should be applied in its popular and correct sense, — that which it has uniformly received under other statutes, especially the trustee act of 1797. In the construction of that act, an open and undisguised departure or removal from the state, was never allowed to have
But the plaintiff moved for judgment non obstante veredicto; and this leads to a different and more important view of the case. Such a motion is founded solely upon what appears to the court upon the record; as where the cause of action is confessed by the defendant’s plea, and a defence, radically defective, is set up. Willes’ R. 360; 1 Sw. Dig. 779; 6 Cowen, 225. The record here consisted of the declaration, the pleadings, and the verdict; the pleadings alleging, on the part of the plaintiff, that an affidavit of the requisite description was filed, but the verdict finding the contrary. It then stood, that the writs issued upon contracts made after the first day of January, 1839, without an affidavit, as required by the statute. The first inquiry, then, is, whether the writs, so far as they professed to authorize an arrest of the debtor, were void, or merely voidable. If they were void for that purpose, the arrests made under them may, as against the plaintiff at least, be treated as mere trespasses. And hence, for the purposes of this action, the defendant might well say, that, by endorsing the writs as bail, he acquired no legal control of his supposed principal, nor any legal power to surrender him. And this would furnish an ample defence to the present action. But if they were only irregular and voidable, then, as no measures were taken to avoid them, or to vacate the arrests, the defendant did acquire the usual rights of bail. In support of the latter proposition, the case has been likened to those where the party was entitled to a personal exemption from arrest. But we think the question should rather depend upon the intrinsic validity of the process in this instance. By the 63d section, chapter 28th of the Revised Statutes, the arrest or imprisonment of our own resident citizens, for contracts made after the first day of January, 1839, is, in general terms, prohibited. But this is qualified by a proviso, that a writ founded upon such a contract, may issue, as an attachment, against the body of the debtor, upon the filing of the affidavit there prescribed. There is, then, no longer any general authority in magistrates, or clerks, to issue writs upon such contracts, in the form of a capias against the person. The right only exists sub modo in a particular class of cases, and
There is, however, another ground upon which the defence may be sustained. It will be perceived, upon inspection of the statute, that the proviso before mentioned applies, in terms, only to the original writ, or mesne process ; for that alone can properly be styled “ a writ on a contract, made after the first day of January,” &c. — which the plaintiff is to pray out, and which is to issue as “ a writ of attachment against the body of the defendant.” And hence it is only by implication from this and other parts of the statute, that a writ of execution, in any case falling within the 63d sec-
The application of what has been said to the case before the court is sufficiently obvious. We are not to infer, from any thing appearing in the case, that the debtor has ceased to be a resident citizen of this state; nor can his aequies
This intention, was subsequently expressed. See act of 1843, (Para, laws, No. 9. p. 8,) in which the word “ writ,” in the 63 Sec. Ch. 28 Rev. Stat. is declared to extend to, and include, writs of execution. . — Reporter.