129 Mass. 40 | Mass. | 1880
The arrest of the plaintiff was illegal. Since the St. of 1877, c. 250, went into operation, no magistrate has had authority to grant a certificate authorizing arrest on execution issued for debt or damages on the first charge specified in the Gen. Sts. e. 124, § 5, it not appearing that the judgment debtor intends to leave the state, until he has issued a notice to the debtor to appear and submit to an examination touching his estate, and the debtor, being duly served therewith, has failed to appear as directed by the magistrate, and to obey all lawful orders and requirements made by the magistrate. If the debtor fails to appear or to obey such orders, the arrest may be authorized, and the subsequent proceedings may be had as provided in the Gen. Sts. a. 124.
In the case at bar, the magistrate granted the certificate purporting to authorize the arrest of the plaintiff, without first issuing a notice to him to appear and submit to examination; and it is contended that this was in accordance with the requirements of the statute, because the plaintiff had made default under a notice to submit to examination issued by another magistrate on an application for a certificate on a former execution issued on the same judgment. This argument is founded on a misapprehension of the meaning and purpose of the St. of 1877. It is a modification of the provisions of the Gen. Sts. e. 124, as to arrest on execution for debt or damage when the application for authority to arrest is based on the charge that the debtor has property, not exempt from being taken on execution, which he does not intend to apply to the payment of the creditor’s claim. Under the General Statutes the certificate authorizing the arrest might be granted on the affidavit of the creditor, or some one in his behalf, to the truth of the charge, and proof of the same to the satisfaction of the magistrate on a hearing ex parte. The effect of the St. of 1877 is to prevent the magistrate from granting the certificate' till he has given the debtor an opportunity to be heard, and to avoid arrest by
It is argued, however, that the conduct of the plaintiff in recognizing with surety before the magistrate, and submitting to examination on his application to take the oath for the relief of poor debtors, and taking that oath, amounted to a waiver of the false imprisonment. This is not so. While it is true that the plaintiff must be presumed to know the law, and to know that his arrest was unlawful and that he was not bound to submit to any examination under it in order to be entitled to a discharge, the fact that he did these things is in no way an indication of any surrender of his right to redress for the wrong done to him by the false imprisonment, and the report does not indicate that the defendant was misled in this regard by his conduct. It does not appear from the report that this point was suggested in/the court below.