18 F. Cas. 1326 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia | 1806
The facts which give jurisdiction to this court in the present case are: That the complainant is a creditor of the deceased, residing in the District of Columbia. That letters of administration have been granted to the defendant, Peggy McLaughlin, by the orphans’ court of Washington. That the only sureties for her faithful administration of the estate reside in Baltimore, in Maryland, and out of the
It is therefore ordered by the court that the said goods, now in the custody of the marshal, be delivered up to the defendant, Peggy McLaughlin, upon her giving a ne exeat bond in the usual form, in the penalty of one thousand nine hundred dollars. Those goods are considered as having been voluntarily delivered to the marshal, and being thus in his hands, by virtue of a condition intended for the benefit of the defendants, the court does not think it right that they should take them back without giving that security for which they were inte'nded as a substitute.
Upon the question respecting the attachments, the court is of opinion, that the defendant. Mrs. McLaughlin, has a right to appear without security. To require security, would be to evade the rule of law that an administrator is not required to give bail for a debt due from the intestate. To allow the goods of the deceased to be attached, would interfere with another rule of law, which requires the marshalling of assets, and the priority or equality of payment to the creditors of the intestate.
The court is also of opinion, that the-process of chancery attachment will not lie in this court against the effects of a debtor, resident within the District of Columbia.
Upon the first hearing of the answer of Mrs. McLaughlin, the court noticed several expressions in it, which at that time, seemed indecorous and disrespectful towards this court and its process. It was endeavored, by her counsel, to explain them in such a manner as to show that they ought not to be considered as offensive. But upon a careful perusal of the answer, the court finds that its first understanding of those expressions was correct; and not to have noticed them, would have implied a carelessness of that self-respect, which it is the duty of every court of justice to maintain. The first expression alluded to, is that which charges, that the complainant’s bill “contains a libel upon the orphans’ court.” Mrs. McLaughlin, or the solicitor who drew her answer, must have known, that the bill had been perused by one of the judges of this court, before the order for a ne exeat was made, and that the judge would not have made such an order, if the bill had been considered as a libel upon that court. Nor has the court found any thing in the bill which can justify that allegation in the answer. After the bill had been thus sanctioned by a judge’s order, the court cannot but consider the expressions of the answer' in that respect as disrespectful. The other expression alluded to, is that which declares, that the defendant's goods “have been shamefully and wantonly seized by the process of this court, at the instance and false suggestions of the complainant.”
The court, therefore, directs the clerk to strike out those expressions in the answer of Mrs. McLaughlin. From the respectability of the counsel who has signed that answer, the court cannot believe that any thing disrespectful to the court was intended to be sanctioned by him, but Is willing to believe that those expressions must either have escaped his notice, or have been understood by him in a manner different from the impression which they have made upon the court