48 N.Y. 313 | NY | 1872
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *315 It is claimed that the statute of 1862, by which this lien was created and under which the attachment proceedings were instituted is void, as in conflict with the constitutional provision which provides that no person shall be deprived of his property "without due process of law."
In Sheppard v. Steele (
If this were an open question, I should without any hesitation reach the same conclusion. An approved definition of due process of law is "law in its regular course of administration through courts of justice." (2 Kent Com., 13.) It need not be a legal proceeding according to the course of the common law; neither must there be personal notice to the party whose property is in question. It is sufficient if a kind of notice is provided by which it is reasonably probable that the party proceeded against will be apprised of what is going on against him, and an opportunity is afforded him to defend. (In the Matter of theEmpire City Bank,
This statute provides for notice of the proceeding by publication, under such circumstances that it is reasonably certain that the opposite party would be apprised of the claim made against him. And it provides that the party may, before sale of the property, have the claim and right to the lien litigated by giving the bond required.
It is claimed that the party is deprived of due process of law because he is first required to give a bond before he can defend against the claim. This doubtless presents a practical difficulty in some cases. But in most cases the owner of the property can give the bond, and the cases would be very rare in which he could not do it. Laws must furnish general rules, and are to be judged by their general effects and tendencies, and not by the particular mischief which, under possible circumstances, they may occasion.
Laws in reference to cattle distrained damage feasant, in reference to strays, and to enforce the responsibility of stockholders in banking corporations, under chapter 226, Laws of 1849, are quite anomalous in their operation and mode of procedure, and yet they have never been considered as depriving a party of due process of law.
It is also claimed that the proceeding which resulted in giving the bond sued on was void, because the application to the county judge did not state the time and place of filing the specification of the claim. Section two of the act requires such specification to be drawn up and filed only in case of the departure of the vessel from the port at which the debt was contracted. And as, in this case, the vessel had not departed, the specification was not necessary to be made or filed, and hence was not required to be mentioned in the application. Besides, the giving of the bond was a waiver of any technical defect in the prior proceedings. The statute creates the lien, and it exists before any proceedings are instituted, and independently of such proceedings; and the bond is conditioned to pay *319 the lien which existed at the time the application was made. The obligation of the bond can therefore be discharged only by showing that no debt was due or that no lien existed.
The remaining questions to be considered in this case are more serious. After all the lumber was delivered, the plaintiff settled with Caler, and took his note for the amount due him; he took it to the bank, and learning that it was not drawn right, returned it to Caler. He then had another note drawn, and, not finding Caler, he took it home, and his son, as is claimed, without his knowledge or consent, took it and got Caler to sign it. The son kept it two weeks and then delivered it to the plaintiff, who then first knew of its execution. The note is dated May 28, 1864, payable in three months from date. The plaintiff testified that he did not accept it as payment, but that he kept it and never offered to return it. The application to the county judge was made, the warrant to the sheriff was issued, the vessel was seized, and the bond sued on was given in the month of July, and this action was commenced soon thereafter.
It matters not that the plaintiff's son took this note without his knowledge or consent. His son assumed to act for him, and when he learned what his son had done for him he adopted and ratified his act by taking and keeping the note. Hence, it must have the same force and effect as if the plaintiff himself had taken it. It did not operate as payment of the debt for which it was given, and probably did not destroy the lien upon the vessel, as that could continue for six months notwithstanding the note. But it extended the time of payment of the debt until the note matured. Such is always the effect of a note upon time for an antecedent debt, and here there is no proof even that the parties agreed or understood that it should not have this effect. The plaintiff could not take and hold this note, and secretly, in his own mind, intend that it should have no effect.
Until this note matured, therefore, the plaintiff could not sue Caler for the debt, and he could not institute the proceeding before the county judge to enforce its collection. *320 The condition of the bond is not to pay claims which were liens only, but such claims as were both due and liens at the time the application to the county judge was made.
The proceeding before the county judge was, therefore, prematurely instituted, and the plaintiff should have been nonsuited. There was nothing in reference to this question to be submitted to the jury.
Upon the trial it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that this lumber had actually been all used in the construction of the vessel before the application was made to the county judge on the 11th of July. And this he was bound to do by evidence competent as against the defendants. Whether all this lumber was used in the construction of this vessel was seriously controverted upon the trial; and to prove that it was, the plaintiff was permitted, against the objection of the defendants, to give evidence of the declarations and admissions of Caler and his agent, Minerly, made after all the lumber had been delivered. I cannot doubt that this was error. Caler was in no sense the agent of Mosher. He had a contract to build the vessel, and there was no such relation between him and Mosher as would make his declarations competent against the latter, and they were no part of any res gestæ so as to make them competent. They were not made when the debt was contracted, but afterward. Assume that they were made in a settlement between Caler and plaintiff before the lumber had been delivered and used, they would then have been good evidence against Caler if he had been a party to the record. But as against these defendants the delivery and use of the lumber must be proved by competent common-law evidence, and cannot be established by the admissions of Caler or his agent, however solemnly made.
Upon the two grounds discussed, I am for a reversal of the judgment, and ordering new trial, costs to abide event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *321