4 How. Pr. 288 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1849
-—The ground on which the defendant asks for his discharge from the execution, is that the judgment against him is founded upon contract, and that he is, therefore exempt from arrest or imprisonment upon it, unde the first section of the act to abolish imprisonment for debt and to punish fraudulent debtors, (Laws of 1881, p. 896.) That act provides “ that no person shall be arrested or imprisoned, on any civil process issuing out of any court of law, &c., in any suit or proceeding instituted for the recovery of any money due on any judgment founded upon contract, or due upon any contract, express or implied, or for the recovery of any damages for the non-performance of any contract.” If this judgment, therefore, was founded on contract, the defendant is entitled to be discharged; otherwise not.
In Brown v. Treat (1 Hill, 225,) it was held by Cowen, J., that a defendant was entitled to be discharged, in a cause where there was a recovery on a declaration containing two counts in assumpsit, one in case for negligence and one in trover. It was indeed said in the opinion, that where an action on contract would lie, although an action of tort would also lie, and a judgment had actually been recovered in tort, the defendant would be entitled to his discharge. But that part of the opinion was expressly overruled in Suydam v. Smith, (7 Hill, 182;) and the decision itself was disapproved in (7th Hill, 578,) in the case of McDuffie v. Beddoe. We come back, therefore, to the question whether the judgment was founded upon contract or not.
This view of this case is decisive against the defendant, and the motion must be denied with costs;