40 Kan. 333 | Kan. | 1888
The opinion of the court was delivered by
S. A. Brown and T. E. Parish, partners as S. A. Brown & Company, obtained a judgment in the district court of Allen county, on March 31,1888, against J. A. Heath, for the sum of $5,648.80, and costs. On April 6,1888, T. ~W. Phelps, as agent of Brown & Company, made an affidavit setting forth that there remained unpaid upon the judgment $3,006.34, together with interest and costs; and also setting forth that J. A. Heath fraudulently incurred the obligation upon which the judgment was rendered; that he had removed his property out of the jurisdiction of the court with the intent
In the action of S. A. Brown & Company against J. A. Heath, tried on March 31, 1888, Georgia J. and Anna R. Amos also recovered a judgment against J. A. Heath, for the sum of $2,806.25, and costs. On April 6,1888, G. A. Amos, as attorney of the judgment creditors, Georgia J. and Anna R. Amos, made affidavit for an execution against the person of J. A. Heath, under the provisions of §§505-507 of the civil code. On the 21st of April, 1888, the district judge of Allen county allowed an execution against the person of J. A. Heath, under the provisions of said §507; and on the 23d day of April, 1888, the district clerk of Allen county issued an order or execution against the person of J. A. Heath, and commanding the sheriff of that county to arrest J. A. Heath and commit him to the jail of the county until the judgment of Georgia J. and Anna R. Amos was paid, or Heath was otherwise discharged according to law. Under the order or execution the sheriff arrested Heath, and committed him to jail. On April 24, 1888, J. A. Heath filed a motion for his discharge from arrest and imprisonment: first, because
“ An execution against the person of the debtor, except as prescribed in section five hundred and nine, can be issued only when the same is allowed by the supreme court, the district court, or any judge of either, upon being satisfied, by the affidavit of the judgment creditor, or his attorney, and such other evidence as may be presented, of the existence of one or more of the particulars mentioned in section five hundred and six. ”
This section expressly states that the affidavit can only be issued when the court or judge is satisfied by the affidavit of the judgment creditor, or his attorney. “Courts are not in the habit of extending by construction either laws or affidavits so as to impose restraint upon personal liberty.” (Hauss v. Kohlar, supra.) Therefore, it seems clear that an execution against the person of the judgment debtor must be founded
As the execution issued upon the judgment of Georgia J. and Anna E. Amos was founded on the affidavit of G. A. Amos, the attorney of the judgment creditors, and as the proceedings in that case were otherwise sufficient, legal causé is fully shown for the restraint of the petitioner in that case. Counsel, however, contend that the execution issued upon the Amos judgment is uncertain, indefinite, and therefore void, because the amount of costs is in blank, never having been properly taxed or. inserted in the judgment. The amount of the judgment is stated in the order of the judge at the sum of $2,806.25, and the command is that Heath, the debtor, be imprisoned “until he pay said judgment, or is discharged according to law.” The statute makes it the duty of the clerk of the court to tax the costs, and when so taxed, to insert them in the judgment; and this ought to have been done before the execution issued. (Fisher v. Franklin, 38 Kas. 251.) Therefore, as the order of the district judge does not state the amount of the costs, that part of the order amounts to nothing. The only judgment recited therein is $2,806.25. This is definite and certain; and the district judge, in commanding this amount to be paid, did not exceed his jurisdiction or authority. The defect or irregularity complained of is beneficial to Heath — not detrimental. Upon the face of- the order, he will be entitled to his discharge when he pays the amount of the judgment recited therein.
It is also urged that a district judge at chambers, or in vacation of the court, has no power to issue an execution against the person of a judgment debtor. The statute expressly confers the power, and there is nothing in the constitution forbidding the exercise thereof. The bill of rights authorizes imprisonment for fraud. (Section 16.)
The petitioner will be discharged under the order or execu