1 Lans. 268 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1869
Present — Marvin, Barker and Lamont, JJ.
By the Court
This is an action founded on an Alleged breach of promise of marriage. The defendant is not a resident of the State. The plaintiff obtained an attachment against defendant’s property, and now the latter moves to set it aside, upon the ground that no warrant of attachment can be
If we look no further than the words of § 227 of the Code, which allows an attachment “ in an action arising on contract, for the recovery of money only,” it would at first view seem difficult to deny that an attachment is authorized in the present case, which is an action founded on an alleged contract to marry between these parties, and the action is also for the recovery of money only. Ho thing but money is sought to be recovered for the alleged breach of the contract. The true meaning, however, of a single clause or sentence con
“ It is an established rule in the exposition of statutes,” says Chancellor Kent, “ that the intention of the -lawgiver is to be deduced from a view of the whole, and every part of a statute, taken and compared together. The real intention when accurately ascertained will prevail over the literal sense of the terms, scire leges non hoc est verla ea/rmn ienere sed. vim ac jootestatem, and the reason and intention of the lawgiver will control the strict letter of the law, where the latter would lead to palpable injustice, contradiction or absurdity.”
(1 Kent Com., 461, 462.)
By § 129 of the Code it is provided, that the plaintiff shall insert'in the summons a notice, in an action arising on contract for the recovery of money only, that he will take judgment for a sum specified therein, if the 'defendant fails to answer, &c. Again, in §246, the plaintiff in any action arising on contract for the recovery of money only, is authorized to file with the clerk proof of personal service, &c., and the clerk shall thereupon enter judgment for the amount mentioned in the summons, in case the complaint is duly verified. These three sections, 129, 227 and 246, all contain.the same phraseology, that is, the words “ in an action arising on contract for the recovery of money only.”
These sections relate to the first step in the action; that is, the summons (§ 129); to the final termination of the action; that is, the judgment (§ 246); and to this provisional remedy by attachment (§ 227). If an action arising on a breach of promise- of marriage is, within the meaning of the Code, an action arising on contract for the recovery of money only, then it follows, that in such action, the notice in the summons should be, that if the defendant fail to answer, the plaintiff
■ The scope of the reasoning in Saddlesvene v. Arms, above cited, is quite inconsistent with the idea that an attachment is allowable in this class of actions. In an action arising on contract for the recovery of money only, the plaintiff states in his. summons that in case of defendant’s default in answering, he will take judgment for a sum specified in the summons,, that is, a sum of money certain ; and, in other actions, that in case of defendant’s default, he will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint. (Code, §129.) By sectk a 142, the relief demanded in the complaint is not any part of the plain and concise statement of the facts constituting a cause of action, but it is the relief to which the plaintiff supposes himself entitled. If the recovery of money be demanded, the amount thereof should be stated.
If it be something else than money, or if it be money, and something else in addition to money, that he supposes himself entitled to, he states what he demands accordingly.
A demand for money is as much a demand for relief, as a demand for the specific performance of a contract, a strict foreclosure of a'mortgage, or for the recovery of the possession of real estate. Where no answer is made, the relief granted to the plaintiff cannot exceed that which he shall have demanded in the complaint (not in the summons), but in any other case, that is, in all cases where the defendant puts in an answer, the court may grant the plaintiff any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint, and embraced within the issue. (§ 275.) Whenever damages are recoverable, the plaintiff may claim and recover, if he shows himself entitled thereto, arvy rate of damages which he might have heretofore recovered for the same cause of action." (§ 276.)
Wo action can properly be said to be, within the meaning of the Code, an action, arising on contract for the recovery of money only, as those words are used in § § 129, 227 and 246,
Unlike other contracts, the agreement to marry has no necessary relation to property; it may be contracted between worthless paupers who expect, by its fulfillment, to realize no pecuniary benefit. When once consummated by actual marriage, unlike other contracts, between party and party, it cannot be rescinded or dissolved by their mutual consent. Marriage is more a civil institution of the State than a mere executed agreement between husband and wife, and the contract to marry, when violated, affords to the injured party a measure of redress, in the remedy given by the law, which does not attach to the violation of private contracts, but ranks among willful and malicious wrongs to the person and the character, wherein damages may be meted out to the delinquent party on the principle of punishment, as well as upon the theory of pecuniary indemnity, for actual loss sustained.
Furthermore, a contract, as that word is ordinarily understood, may be entered into between any two or more persons of full age; not so the contract to marry, into which only two persons can enter, and those unmarried persons, and of different sexes.
It is so far different from all other contracts, and has so many peculiar qualities not belonging to contracts in general, that it is not embraced in a general statute which speaks of, or regulates contracts, without some particular reference to the contract to marry. The rights growing out of ordinary con- . tracts between party and party survive to their representatives ; but the right and the remedy accruing from the contract to marry, die with the person, and cannot afterward be enforced. We are not without authority for holding that the contract of marriage is not to be considered as embraced in a legislative or constitutional provision relating to contracts,
That question was discussed by a learned judge in the Court of Appeals in Lawrence v. Miller (2 Comstock, 245), but the majority of the court placed their decision upon another ground. (See page 253.) But in White v. White (5 Barb. 474), it was decided that the word contacts in the constitution of the United States did not embrace marriage contracts.
Mr. Justice Marvin, in the case of Saddlesvene v. Arms, gave unanswerable reasons why an attachment is not allowable in an action for a wrong as for assault and battery, or slander. He deduced such conclusions from the various provisions of the Code compared together, and other statutes in pari materia,, as well as by an examination of the machinery of the proceeding by warrant of attachment. He says (32 How. 285): “ It is true, he (that is the plaintiff) is to pecify the amount of the claim and the grounds of it; but in most actions of tort the damages are uncertain and entirely unknown until the verdict of the jury is rendered, and the plaintiff may fix them at any sum without the fear of conviction for pefyury. This will not be so if the action is for the breach of a contract, for then the facts constituting the contract and the breach must be stated as the ‘ grounds ’ of the claim, and the amount of the claim must be stated. Here are sundry facts to be stated, and if they are not truly stated, the person making the affidavit may be convicted of perjury.”
The learned judge comes to the conclusion in the decision referred to, that “ this remedy (by attachment) is confined to actions»upon contract, in which the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled can be specified ” (32 How., 286); and I fully concur in his reasoning and conclusion, which apply with equal force to the present case.
Whether the same identical words have the same meaning as they are used in §§ 129, 227 and 246 of the Code, it is not now necessary to determine. The construction put upon them as used in § 129, has been very fully considered in the case of Tuttle v. Smith (14 How., 395), and that decision approved in Cobb v. Dunkin (19 How., 164), both General Term decisions ; and those decisions were remarked upon as settling the construction of § 129, in a later case at Special Term in another district. (Norton v. Cary, 23 How., 469.) This construction is alluded to by Justice Marvin, in Saddlesvene v. Arms (32 How., 283, 284); but without admitting that the warrant of attachment is to be confined to those cases, in which the summons must state that judgment will be taken for a specific sum if the defendant fails to answer, or to cases of liquidated damages.
If we adopt the construction put upon this language as used in reference to the summons in § 129, and give the same construction to the same language in § 227, it would follow that no attachment can be allowed m an action on a breach of promise of marriage. But even if that construction is too
Order affirmed.