23 Mich. 129 | Mich. | 1871
Maxon prosecuted Johnson in the court below for an alleged false imprisonment, and the latter sought to defend himself by showing that the imputed- trespass consisted of an arrest and imprisonment by means of a proceeding under the non-imprisonment act. The court excluded the defense, on the ground that the proceedings in question were absolutely void. The arguments from the bar before us were quite elaborate, and directed to several points which we need not consider. According to the view taken, the case may be decided upon one general ground, and the judgment formed upon that naturally excludes several topics which were assumed in the argument as pertinent to the controversy. It is very material to confine our survey to the nature and form of the remedy chosen by the plaintiff
The leading objection made by Maxon to the proceeding was not that process of the kind employed was in no case within the jurisdiction of the justice, or not within his jurisdiction in proceedings under the non-imprisonment act, nor was it that any particular fact as a ground of process was wholly unproved. But it was
Having attempted to explain the general nature and limits of the present question, we may proceed to a more particular examination. As already intimated, the plaintiff below assumed by his action, and claimed on the argument, that the proceedings before the justice were not merely voidable, but absolutely void for inadequacy of proof, and in order to support this position he was compelled to argue in substance that we must hold these proceedings void, unless it should appear to us that the evidence not -only tended to make out a case but certainly established a prima facie one. The character of this proposition naturally directs us to the statute itself, to see if we can gather from thence
The rule thus laid down is replete with good, sense and conformable to justice. But the doctrine contended for by defendant in error would make the law a snare to magistrates and suitors and tend to subvert the remedy. As a matter of propriety and prudence, all magistrates ought, to require, in cases of this, description, very clear and-cogent evidence; but their jurisdiction cannot depend upon the view whicli other officers of equal or higher grade may take of “the just weight.and importance” of the evidence.. If, therefore, in the present instance, the evidence laid
It was suggested upon the argument, but not much pressed, that the creditors intended to be defrauded should have been shown to be judgment creditors. But it is plain from the nature of the remedy and the framework of the act that the proceeding was intended- to be available when there should be no judgment creditors at all. The first clause of § 6890 gives the remedy when the defendant is about to remove any of his property out of the jurisdiction of the court in which the suit is brought with intent to defraud his creditor or creditors; the third, when he has assigned, removed or disposed of, or is about to dispose ofi any of his property, with the intent to defraud his creditor or creditors; and the fourth, when he fraudulently contracted the debt or incurred the obligation then in suit.
These clauses thus imply clearly that the proceeding is appropriate under either of them when there is but one creditor, and when he has proceeded no further towards a judicial liquidation of his claim than the commencement of a suit. The second clause, however, makes special provision for a class of cases where demands have passed into judgments or -decrees, and in those the unjust refusal to apply money, etc., in payment, is declared a ground for proceeding. The exceptional and peculiar character of this provision affords a strong presumption in favor of the inference drawn from the terms of the other clauses; and other' portions of the act, and especially § 6896 and the two following sections, favor the same view. The conclusion is.
Having attempted to elucidate the real question involved in this branch of the case, we may proceed to a direct examination of the evidence laid before the justice as a ground for the arrest. That evidence was contained in the affidavits of Johnson and the sheriff, and was intended to establish a case under the first and third clauses of the statute. It will suffice to consider it in its application to the requirements of the first clause. Because, if the showing was such as to confer jurisdiction under that, a failure under another would not militate against Johnson’s defense. The existence of a demand by White against Maxon upon contract, and the pendency of a suit thereon at White’s instance, before the justice applied to for the warrant, were positively affirmed by plaintiff in error, and the position of Maxon assumes that these facts were shown. The affidavits also showed that such suit was commenced by attachment which was in the hands of the sheriff for service; that, just before the complaint was made to the justice, Maxon had sold and conveyed his house and lot to one Beach, for six hundred and twenty dollars; that Beach had paid three hundred and twenty-four dollars in money to Maxon, and given his note and mortgage to a third person, namely, one Alexander M. Johnson, who had paid Maxon forty-five dollars in money and two gold watches, valued at two hundred and fifty dollars, making in property and money received by Maxon for his house and lot, six hundred and nineteen dollars; that Maxon had also then recently been packing up his goods and other personal property in trunks and boxes in a convenient form for removal; that he had stated to the plaintiff in error, that
These circumstances were certainly relevant to prove, .and, unexplained and uncontradicted, had a very strong tendency to prove, the main facts in the case, except one to be noticed presently. They certainly conduced to show that Maxon was about to remove beyond the. jurisdiction, and carry with him all the property apparently belonging to him. The plaintiff in error testified that he believed such removal was intended by Maxon. to defraud White. This -intent of Maxon was a circumstance incapable, from its' nature, of being sworn to positively by a third person, and hence the legislature could not have intended to require positive proof. If the fact thus, asserted on belief, and, properly asserted in that form, actually existed, it was provable by facts and circumstances; and the facts and circumstances positively sworn to were in the proper line, of proof to show that the belief of the plaintiff in error was well founded. When combined, did they furnish any evidence however “slight and inconclusive” that the intent imputed to Maxon actually existed? This question is not to be- settled by metaphysical refinements, or conjectures: or suppositions, or by imagining the existence of other facts not. appearing. Its solution may depend on the natural force and efficacy of the facts in generating a belief as a consequence of those connections which are shown by experience, irrespective of any legal relation. Now, Maxon
It remains to notice two other objections of defendant in error to the proceedings under the non-imprisonment act. The first is based upon the circumstance that when those proceedings were commenced, White’s attachment had been levied upon' what is claimed to have been sufficient of Maxon’s goods and chattels to satisfy the debt; and it is insisted that this fact, of its own force, rendered -the proceedings voidj and may consequently be shown in this action to deprive them of all efficacy as a shield of defense for Johnson.
There is surely much reason for contending, that while a valid levy subsists on sufficient personal property, it is irreg
The only case brought to our attention bearing directly on this point, is that of the Commonwealth v. O’Hara, in a district court in Pennsylvania. — Law Register for Oct., 1867, p. 766. But there the respondent raised the question in the course of the proceedings before the judge who issued the warrant, and the ruling referred to was directly made in the same case. There were two objections; one founded on the bankrupt act, and the other on the fact established by the respondent, that a levy on his personal property was pending when the proceedings were commenced. The judge decided that both objections were “well taken, and in stating his opinion on the last, he' said that the warrant was not regularly issued and could not be enforced pending the levy; but he did not intimate that his process was absolutely void.
The last question which we need consider, is upon the objection of defendant in error, that the act referred to is unconstitutional. In support of this objection, it is said that the remedy contemplated is a 'criminal prosecution within the meaning of § 28 of Article VI. of the Constitution, and being required to be carried on before a judicial officer without a jury, the statute is void.
This proposition is believed to be wholly untenable. It is true that in Bromley v. The People, 7 Mich., 472, this court, as then constituted, was equally divided in opinion as to whether a proceeding under the act belonged to the domain of civil or criminal remedies, and two members of the court thought it was of a punitory or quasi-criminal
The final result is, that the non-imprisonment act is not impugned by the Constitution, as claimed, and that the proceedings before the justice were not void for want of jurisdiction, as urged on behalf of defendant in error, and, therefore, that they were legally admissible upon the trial as a ground of defense by Johnson to the cause of action set up against him, and, consequently, that the judgment of the circuit court ought to be reversed with costs and a new trial ordered.