6 Vt. 614 | Vt. | 1834
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— Wherever the proceeding by foreign attachment, or, as we style it, the factorising or trustee process, is known to prevail, it has its origin either in local custom or statutory provision. In this state it does no): exist except by force of certain statutes, and the present question must therefore depend upon their construction.
The act of October 31, A. D. 1797, which is the first and principal statute on the subject now in force, is not explicit as to the residence of the trustee. It only enacts, — " That if “ any person or persons shall have in his, her or their posses-
Jt should be borne in mind, that the proceeding against the trustee is not an original or’ distinct action. The direct suit is between the creditor and principal debtor, and this is but a species of attachment, incidental to that suit, and dependent upon it. And hence the general rule, that any person coming into this state is allowed to institute, or may be holden to defend, a transitory personal action, is not conclusive of the question submitted. The object of these statutes is to furnish a remedy against the funds and effects ■of the debtor, when, in conse
The statutes evidently presuppose such a jurisdiction over the trustee, that, ordinarily, their provisions may be carried into full execution against him, by the. means which they have provided. But these means must prove very inadequate to their object, when neither the trustee nor the effects can be reached by the first execution, nor the-trustee served with the necessary process, preparatory to the second and conclusive judgment, against him. And although this consideration might have less weight, in those cases where execution is authorized directly against the trustee in the first instance, yet, as such a case is not to be anticipated, but depends upon the nature of his accountability to the principal debtor, which can only appear by the .disclosure or other evidence on trial; the distinction furnishes no aid upon a preliminary point of jurisdiction. If, therefore,.the question rested solely upon the statute of 1797, we should incline to decide, that none but persons resident in this state could properly be holden as trustees. This opinion, however, is fortified by both the succeeding statutes. Under that of 1S17, the trustee must be “an inhabitant of this state a limitation scarcely to be accounted for, if, under the previous general act upon the subject, any person could be holden as such', who should happen to be found within the state. And the act of 1830, by speaking of the absent debtor as one “ having money, goods, chattels, rights or credits to him belonging, with any person or persons- in this state,” carries a very strong implication, that while the residence of the debtor is without the state, that qf his factor, agent, or trustee, is within it.. On
Judgment of the oounty court affirmed.