17 Conn. 233 | Conn. | 1845
The first question presented for our advice, is, whether the county court erred in rendering judgment that the writ of replevin should abate. This involves, in the first place, the inquiry, whether the act for the regulation of civil actions, (section 1.) providing, that if the plaintiff is not an inhabitant of this state, he shall procure surety in a bond to prosecute his action to effect, applies to the action of replevin. This statute is sufficiently broad in its terms to include this action; it is general in its language, and embraces all civil actions ; and there is no reason why the defendant in this should not have the same security for costs, as in other civil actions. Nor is this statute inapplicable to this action, by reason of its being given by the statute of replevin only, and not by the common law; and that the latter statute was passed subsequently to the former. It is sufficiently comprehensive in its terms, and, in our opinion, was intended to embrace, not only all civil actions then in use, but also such as might thereafter be created ; and when the action of replevin was subsequently authorized, it became subject to the operation of this general law. Nor, however it might be with respect to some other of its sections, do we perceive any incongruity in such a construction of the ] st section of it, arising from the provision of the statute allowing the action of re-plevin, or from the nature of that action.
The next inquiry involved in the question we are now considering, is, whether the replevin bond given in this case, which is the bond required by the 8th section of the replevin act, secures to the defendant in this action of replevin his costs ; for if that is its effect, we should hold it to be a compliance with the 1st section of the act regulating civil actions requiring such security. We are of opinion, that it does not. By a reference to the replevin law, it is perfectly clear, that the bond required by the 8th section of it is intended solely as a security to the plaintiff ⅛ the suit in which the goods are attached, for the amount recovered in that suit, in whole or in part, according as the value of such goods is, or is not, as great
The remaining question is, whether that court was correct in awarding a return of the property replevied to the defendant, in the action of replevin.
Replevin is not, in this state, a common law action, but is given solely by statute ; and it is only recently, (1821,) that it was extended to the case where the property of one person has been taken on an attachment against another. In that case, the statute is very particular in its provisions as to the proceedings in the suit, and the form and mode in which the judgment shall be rendered. After prescribing the terms of the bond to be given by the plaintiff, and that the attaching party shall be cited into court to answer to a charge for unlawfully taking the goods, it provides, that if the plaintiff shall make out a title to such goods, he shall have judgment to retain the same, with his damages and costs ; but that if he shall fail to make out a title, judgment shall be rendered against him to return such goods to the attaching officer, and that on failure thereof, he shall pay the value thereof, or the debt or damages and costs recovered in the action in which they were attached, in case they exceed in value the amount of such recovery. Stat. of Replevin, sect. 8. p. 505. By this statute, rather than by the rules which apply to common law actions of replevin, must the proceedings of our courts be governed. In the case before us, it is alleged, by the plaintiff, in his writ, that the goods to be replevied v/ere attached by the defendant, in a suit against Patrick Laurie. The writ of replevin was properly abated, as has been shown, by reason of an irregularity in its being issued without the requisite bond for prosecution. It is, therefore, a case where the plaintiff failed to make out a title to the goods replevied on that writ; for it is hardly requisite to say, that the abatement of the writ for such a cause, necessarily precluded a trial of the title, and much more an establishment of it in favour of the plaintiff. The defendant, therefore, was entitled to a judgment of return, unless the objections urged by the plain
It is claimed, in the first place, that the title to the property was not in question on the pleadings; and that, therefore, the judgment of return is not within the issue formed. It is a sufficient answer, that by reason of the irregularity in the issuing of the writ of replevin, and that owing to the fault of the plaintiff, of which it was the right of the defendant to take advantage by plea in abatement, the cause had not reached that stage where the question of title could be presented or tried. And it is because, by reason of this fault of the plaintiff, the title could not be tried, on account of the abatement of the writ, that he had precluded himself from establishing his title, and therefore failed to make his title good, as the statute required. It would be singular indeed, that where a trial of the merits of an action is prevented, by a defect or irregularity in the process, occasioned by a fault of the plaintiff, he should be placed in the same condition as he would have been, if the process had been in all respects regular, and there had been a trial of the merits and a decision in his favour, or that the defendant should lose the benefit which he might have had of a trial on the merits, and a decision in his favour on such trial, by interposing, as he had a right to do, an exception in limine to the validity of the process. When the process is set aside for such a cause, justice requires that the parties should be placed in statu quo, which can be done only by returning to the defendant the property replevied, and putting the plaintiff to a new writ of replevin. When the writ is thus abated, it is as if there was no writ, and therefore no process on which the property can be legally retained by the plaintiff. The proposition is by no means true, that where the title has not been tried in replevin, there cannot be a judgment of return. On a nonsuit or withdrawal in replevin, by the plaintiff, the title could not be tried ; but in these, and many other similar cases, it has been determined, that a return shall be awarded ; and the reason is, that by the fault or act of the plaintiff, the defendant is prevented from maintaining or showing his title. The same reason substantially applies in this case.
It is suggested, that the defendant, by tendering the issue made in this case, has waived all claim to a return. To hold,
The plaintiff in error, however, further insists, that although the defendant might have been entitled to a return, if it had been claimed in a proper form, an avowry by him was necessary to warrant the award of a return by the court; and cases adjudged where replevin is a common law action and the common law rules prevail in respect to it, are relied on. This is merely a technical point; since, if an avowry was necessary, it would not be traversable, but only a matter of suggestion to the court; like the suggestion by way of avow-ry, where the issue is found for the defendant, on the plea of cepit in alio loco, where it is necessary that it should be made for a particular purpose only, namely, to warrant the further proceedings of the court requisite on behalf of the defendant, and not to lay the foundation for a trial between the parties of the truth of the facts so suggested ; and hence a traverse of the avowry, in such case, is held to be irregular : and it would not only be unreasonable, but inconsistent, to absolve the defendant from answering the charge of the plaintiff, by abating the writ, and, at the same time, to compel him to try the merits of the cause with the plaintiff. Potter v. North, 1 Wms. Saund. 347. and n. 1. Crosse v. Bilson, 6 Mod. 102. Anon. 1 Vent. 127. Foot's case, 1 Salk. 93. Anon. Id. 94. pl. 4.
Such an examination, however, of the common law authorities, as we have been able to make, does not, by any means, support the proposition, that an avowry, or suggestion in the nature of an avowry, is necessary, where the writ of replevin is abated or set aside, on account of an irregularity or defect in the replevin process. It is true, that the general rule, as stated in the books, is, substantially, that in order to entitle
But however it may be at the common law, the terms of ottr statute are such as to render an avowry, or suggestion in
The superior court, therefore, should be advised, that the judgment of the county court ought to be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.