7 F. 811 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1881
This action was commenced in the circuit court for the county of Multnomah. The defendants appeared and caused it to be removed to this court. It is brought upon the undertaking of the defendants for an attachment given in the action of Ah Jim v. Ah Kow, then pending in the circuit court for the county of Clatsop, in November, 1879. The complaint alleges that in pursuance of said undertaking, and the affidavit of Ah Jim, a writ of attachment was issued in said action, upon which the prop
The cause was submitted to the court for trial without the intervention of a jury, and it found that the attachment was sued out and levied as akeged, and that it was wrongful; that the plaintiff’s testator was injured thereby in the sum ■of $75; and also that the plaintiff herein obtained judgment in said action against the defendant herein, Ah Jim, for his ■costs and disbursements, taxed at $144.25, and $2.45 accru':ing expense on the execution.
The defendants contend shat, as the attachment was only
With this brief referenc e to the provisions of the Code bearing on the subject, and their operation, we will consider the effect of section 144, supra, as applied to this case. The supreme court of the state has not passed upon the question, and this court, for the piesent, must decide it for itself. Counsel for the defendants contend that the parties to the undertaking are not bound to pay “all costs that may be adjudged to the defendant” in the action generally, but only such as are so adjudged by reason of the attachment; while the argument of the plaint ff is that the statute expressly gives the right to recover all costs adjudged'when the plaintiff fails in the action, theieby making the undertaking in such ease a security for cosis. In my judgment'the parties .to the undertaking incur two distinct obligations—(1) To pay all costs and disburseme nts that may be adjudged to the defendant—not including all disbursements which he may incur by reason of the attachment or action, but only such as the court in which the action is tried shall determine he is entitled to; and (2) to pay all damages that the defendant may sustain by reason of the attachment, if the same be wrongful, and this includes expenses incurred by reason of a
The New York Code, § 230, provides that the undertaking for an attachment should be to the effect “that if the defendant recover judgment, or the attachment be set aside by the order of the court, the plaintiff will pay all costs that may be awarded to tbe defendant, and all damages which he may sustain by reason of the attachment.” In other words, if the plaintiff fail in his action the parties to the undertaking must pay the costs thereof. The statute of Tennessee is also similar in this particular to that of Oregon, but I have not found any decision under either it or the New York one on this question. It provides that the sureties shall satisfy “all costs which shall be awarded to the defendant in case the plaintiff shall be cast in his suit, and also all damages which shall be recovered against the plaintiff * * * for wrongfully suing out the attachment.” Drake on Attachments, § 170.
The plaintiff in this action is entitled to recover the sum of §146.70, the costs and disbursements adjudged to him in the former action, and also the sum of $75, the damages sustained by his testator by reason of the attachment in said action,—in all, $221.70,—and there will he findings accordingly.