99 Ind. 143 | Ind. | 1884
The complaint of the appellee alleges that it is a corporation organized under the laws of New York; that one Thompson Roe instituted proceedings in attachment .against it, and that the bond filed in the proceedings was signed by the appellant as a surety. It is not directly alleged that a writ of attachment was issued, but it is alleged
The complaint was not questioned in the court below in any form, but is here assailed by the assignment of errors. The counsel for appellant thus state their objection: “ The objection to the complaint is that it nowhere directly alleges that a writ of attachment was issued.” It is our opinion that this objection can not prevail. It has long been a rule of pleading that many defects, available upon demurrer, are cured by a finding or vex'dict. This rule applies here. There are facts stated in the pleading, which, by reasonable intendment, enable us to decide that a writ of attachment was issued, and this is sufficient to shield the complaint froxn such an attack as the present. Murphy v. Murphy, 95 Ind. 430; Jones v. White, 90 Ind. 255; Puett v. Beard, 86 Ind. 104; Shimer v. Bronnenburg, 18 Ind. 363.
The appellaxxt complains of the lulling of the trial court in admitting the transcript of the l’ecord in the attachment proceedings, and the appellee contends that the bill of exceptions does not properly present this question, for the reason that all of the evidence is not in the record. It is not always necessary to bring all the evidence into the record, in order to present a ruling admitting or excluding evidence, but it is always necessary to incorporate so much of it as shows the full character of the ruling, and exhibits the asserted error. Johnson v. Wiley, 74 Ind. 233; Stout v. Woods, 79 Ind. 108; Shorb v. Kinzie, 80 Ind. 500; Shimer v. Butler University, 87 Ind. 218, vide p. 220; Pavey v. Wintrode, 87 Ind. 379, p. 381; McClellan v. Bond, 92 Ind. 424; Conden v. Morningstar, 94 Ind. 150. The appellee is xvrong in stating as broadly'as he does the proposition that all of the evidence must invariably be in the record, for thex*e are cases where rulings admitting or excluding testimony may be presented without the entire evidence.
The evidence, which the appellee asserts was omitted from
The affidavit for attachment and the complaint in the case instituted by Thompson Roe charged that the defendant, in that case, constituted a partnership composed of D. M. Osborne, and other persons to the plaintiff unknown, and it is insisted that it was error to admit in evidence the transcript of the record in that case, for the reason that here the plaintiff appears as a corporation, and can not maintain an action upon a bond executed in proceedings against a partnership. In the argument upon this point counsel for the appellant lose sight of the important fact that D. M. Osborne & Co. appeared to the action in which the attachment was issued, and that the plaintiff, in that proceeding, after having seized the property of D. M. Osborne & Co. under the writ, voluntarily dismissed the proceedings. It appears from this fact that it,was the present plaintiff and appellee against whom the attachment was directed, and that the property seized belonged to it, and that to it was all the injury done. The seizure and the consequent injury are attributable to the wrongful proceedings in the attachment case, and the law, in requiring a bond, intends to secure protection to those who are proceeded against as defendants, and whose property is attached by virtue of the writ sued out by the attaching plaintiff. The identity of the parties was established by proper evidence, and it seems plain that the party who is sued as defendant, and as defendant sustains injury, is éntitled to redress. The case is altogether different from one in which the sheriff^ in executing the writ, levies upon the property of some per
It may be true, as a general rule, that it is only the defendant who can maintain an action on the attachment bond, and that a stranger can not have an action although his property may be seized. Drake Attachment, section 162. But the pai’ty who brought this action was not a stranger; the bond was intended to secure the party against whom the proceedings were instituted and whose property it was intended to reach, and the present plaintiff was that party, although wrongly described in the complaint and affidavit in attachment. The person against whom the proceedings were directed was the present plaintiff, but a wrong name and description were assigned. There is a complete identity, although there is a misnomer. The first case cited by the author to whom we have referred is Raspillier v. Brownson, 7 La. 231 (4 N. S. 149), where it was held that a third per
We have no doubt that it was necessary for the appellee to prove that it was the person against whom the attachment proceedings were directed. There was, however, evidence from which this fact was fairly and justly inferable, and this is enough to support the finding of the trial court. In civil cases the rule has always been that it is sufficient if there is evidence leading by legitimate inference to the conclusion reached by the court or jury that tried the case, and it is not necessary that the fact should be directly established by positive evidence. 1 Greenl. Ev., section 13 a; Indianapolis, etc., R. R. Co. v. Collingwood, 71 Ind. 476 ; Indianapolis, etc., R. W. Co. v. Thomas, 84 Ind. 194.
It was proper for the appellee to prove that the writ sued
We have already copied one of the allegations of the complaint showing that a writ of attachment was issued against the appellee, and we add the following (found at other places in the complaint), namely: “ That in obedience to the writ of attachment issued in said cause the sheriff levied upon and attached the following property of the plaintiff.” “ Plaintiff was compelled to employ attorneys for the defence of said action and attachment proceedings.” The allegations of the pleading fully show that the action was against the appellee, and that the bond sued on was given to secure an attachment in that cause, so that the appellant could not, in any way, have been misled by the pleading, nor left in doubt as to the cause of action urged against him. If it were conceded that the complaint should have more formally stated the mistake in describing the appellant, that would not avail, because it was a defect, if a defect at all, amendable in the trial court, and/ by force of an imperative statute, to be deemed amended here. R. S. 1881, section 658.
A variance between the allegations of the pleading, and the evidence is, to quote from our statute, to be deemed immaterial “unless it have actually misled the adverse party, to his prejudice, in maintaining his action or defence upon the merits.” R. S. 1881, section 391. If, therefore, it were conceded