3 Wis. 649 | Wis. | 1854
By the Court,
The practice attempted
This suit was commenced by attachment. The whole proceedings, as shown by the record, present merely an ordinary case, in which the property of a judgment or attachment debtor was levied upon and claimed by a third person; or, in other words, a fair case for the bringing’ of an action of trespass, trover, or replevin. But the suit was commenced by attachment, and it doubtless seemed necessary to the learned counsel for the plaintiff below, to bring himself, if possible, within the provisions of the .Revised Statutes, which authorize the commencement of suits by attachment. Section 101, of chapter 28, of the Revised Statutes, provides that, — “Before any such writ of attachment shall be issued, the plaintiff, or some person in his behalf, shall make and file with the justice an affidavit, stating that the defendant therein is indebted to the plaintiff in a sum exceeding five dollars, and specifying the amount of such indebtedness, as near1 as may be, over and above all legal set-offs, and that the same is due upon eon,tract, express or implied, or upon the judgment or decree of some, court, and containing a forth er statement, <fcc.”
The making of this affidavit, and the conformity of the cause of action to the nature of the proceeding contemplated and authorized by this statute, are essential to the jurisdiction of the justice of the writ thereby authorized.
The proceeding by attachment, with all its safeguards, is at best, a violent remedy, and we are not disposed to give to the statute a more liberal con* struction than a fair interpretation of its letter demands.
There are some cases in which a party may waive the tort and sue in assumpsit. When the trespasser
In the case before us, there is no pretence of a sale of the goods by the defendant below, nor any conversion of them into money, or other thing of value. The action of assumpsit, therefore, will not lie. This is not a case in which the tort may be waived, and it is apparent, from the character of the affidavit, and the extraordinary character of the declaration, or statement of the cause of action, that the only object in view, in bringing an action of assumpsit, was to
Of course, we have here had no reference to cases brought against an executor or administrator, or where the tort feasor is dead, and the action of trespass or trover is lost, or to the case of tortious enticing away or hiring of apprentices, <fec. These and their like rest upon their own peculiar circumstances, and must be determined according to the legal-principles applicable to each, as occasion shad require.
The views we have taken of the law applicable to this case are decisive, and it is not necessary to discuss the numerous legal propositions presented by counsel on the argument. It was the duty of the justice, and of the County Court, to have arrested the proceedings whenever it appeared that the cause of action was founded in tort, and not upon contract, and consequently one in which the writ of attachment was forbidden by the statute. The court or justice may be deceived by the affidavit of the plaintiff who sees ft to state an indebtedness founded upon contract; but when the evidence discloses the truth, and it is apparent that there is no snch cause of action, no indebtedness, no contract, but a mere claim for damages, sounding wholly in tort, the court should proceed no further in the case than to nonsuit the plaintiff. The judgment of the County Court is reversed, with costs.