4 Ind. 563 | Ind. | 1853
Louderback procured from a justice of the peace a writ of ne exeat against Rosengrant, upon an affidavit as follows:
“ I, Daniel Louderback, do solemnly swear that Charles Rosengrant is justly indebted to me in the sum of eighty dollars by note, which note is not yet due; and that I have reason to believe and do verily believe that the said Charles Rosengrant is about to remove from this state without leaving sufficient property for the payment or satisfaction of his just debts, or without providing for the performance of his said contract. Daniel Louderback.”
The constable returned the writ, with the body of the defendant, to the justice, who, after hearing the case, “considered that said defendant remain in custody until he find security,” &c.
The defendant thereupon gave special bail for the payment of the debt, or for his appearance to answer to a suit, &c.; and feeling himself aggrieved by the decision of the justice requiring such special bail, he subsequently, but within thirty days, appealed from said decision to the Circuit Court.
The history of the case and the points made and ruled in that Court, are shown by a short bill of exceptions which states, that “upon the calling of the cause the plaintiff moved to dismiss the appeal, because the defendant, on the trial of the cause before the justice, executed and filed his bond conditioned for the performance of the contract, in obedience to the order of the justice, before praying an appeal; which motion the Court overruled. And afterwards the said defendant moved to dismiss the suit, because the affidavit upon which the writ of ne exeat issued, did not contain an allegation that the defendant
The defendant was not bound to pray an appeal at any time before actually taking it by filing his bond. The objection first above mentioned, made by the plaintiff, may be treated, therefore, as being that the appeal was taken after the bond in the ne exeat proceeding was filed.
We think the Court did right in overruling the motion to dismiss the appeal. The statute authorizing the writ of ne exeat (Acts of 1847, p. 80, s. 14), provides that either party may appeal to the Circuit Court from the decision of the justice, as in ordinary cases.
In ordinary cases, a party may appeal from the judgment of the justice at any time within thirty days from its rendition. The privilege is without qualification, except that a bond must be given, and we are not disposed to curtail it by constructive waivers. Should an ordinary judgment before a justice be stayed by putting in bail, or be paid off even, still we think the right of appeal, on the part of the defendant, within the thirty days, would not be lost. The party would not, by those acts, be deprived of the statutory right of testing the correctness of the judgment, and obtaining relief should he procure its reversal in the Supreme Court. It might be out of his power immediately to get security in an appeal, while it might be in his power and necessary to his personal liberty, or the security of his property, to stay execution on the judgment till he could perfect an appeal.
We think the Court erred in refusing to permit the plaintiff to amend his affidavit. The statute relative to appeals generally from justices’ judgments, expressly authorizes amendments in the Circuit Court; R. S. 1843, p. 891, s. 171; and, as we have said, the statute of 1847 relative to writs of ne exeat, puts appeals from decisions under it on the footing of ordinary ones. The affidavit, in a proceeding of this kind before a justice, like that in
The Court should have sustained the motion of the plaintiff for leave to amend, and, of course, overruled that of the defendant to dismiss,4as the amendment would, when made, remove the cause assigned for the dismissal.
The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.