15 How. Pr. 210 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
Motion for discharge of the relator on habeas corpus.
He is detained- by virtue of an execution against his body issued on a final judgment against him. The judgment was recovered for the value of a travelling bag and contents, deposited with him for safe keeping, as innkeeper of the Irving House, in this city, the plaintiff therein being a guest at said house. The action was brought upon the custom of this state, which is alleged to be, that the innkeepers are bound to keep safely such property for their guests. The breach alleged for which the judgment is recovered is, that “ defendant did not keep said bag and contents safely and without diminution, but on the contrary, he and his servants so negligently and carelessly behaved and conducted, that said bag and contents were by mere carelessness of defendant and his servants, carried away by some person unknown, and were wholly lost to plaintiff.”
On this judgment an execution against the body of defendant was issued, on which he is now in custody. The question on which the legality of the imprisonment depends is, whether the execution against his body was authorized by the judgment. But there is a preliminary question here, viz: whether the regularity or propriety of that process can be inquired into in this proceeding on habeas corpus. Section 22, subd. 2, of the habeas corpus act, (2 R. S. 563,) provides that
The judgment and execution are before me, and the remaining question is, whether, on the whole, this execution on such a judgment is authorized in law. The suit was brought to recover the value of certain articles, on the ground that the defendant was bound by the custom of this state to receive and safely keep the property of his guests, and that having received that of the plaintiff he kept it so negligently that it was lost. This custom of the realm would seem in the absence of express contract to take the place of it, and an action for not preserving the property according to it would seem to be in the nature of an action for breach of contract. But on a more careful consideration, the grounds of the action appear to be not the failure to keep safely and restore the property, which would probably be only a breach of implied contract, but the negligent, careless and improper behavior and conduct of the defendant, the wrongful (tortious) conduct of defendant and his agents, (negative perhaps, to be sure, but nevertheless
(See Burkle agt. Ellis and al., 4 How. Pr. R. 288; The Bank of Orange Co. agt. Brown and others, 3 Wend. 158; Bretherton agt. Wood, 3 Brod. and Bing. 54; 2 Lord Raymond, 909; 2 Ct. Pl. 155 and 320; Hallenbaek agt. Fish, 8 Wend. 547 ; 4 do. 618.)
In the cases above cited, it is settled that an action on the custom is founded on the tort or misfeasance, and not on the contract, express or implied, which often attends the transaction, and is in many of the cases given in evidence. It is often difficult to determine whether the action is on the contract or on the custom, and the confusion in the cases, seems to have arisen from the difficulty in ascertaining which constituted the basis of the action, the custom or the contract, rather than whether an action ascertained to be on the custom was founded on tort or on contract. (3 Wend. 168.)
The suit against Burroughs being the custom, was founded on tort; the judgment record shows this fact. With this fact apparent, was the execution properly issued against the body of defendant ? Under the non-imprisonment act, (Laws of 1831, p. 396,) by which this question would have been controlled, prior to the Code, he would have been liable to arrest, for, under that a defendant in an action in tort could be held to bail. (Burkle agt. Ellis, 4 How. Pr. R. 288.) But by the Code, which now embraces the law on the subject, the only provision under which there is any pretence for the claim is contained in section 179, subdivision 1, which authorizes the arrest of a party, “In an action * * * * * on a cause of action not arising out of contract, where the defendant is not a resident of the state, or is about to remove therefrom, or where the action is for an injury to person or character, or for injuring or wrongfully taking, detaining or converting property.” It does not appear that the defendant is not a resident of this state, or being so, is about to remove therefrom, nor does it ap
My conclusions are:
First—That in this writ of habeas corpus, I am authorized to inquire,
1. (2 R. S. 568, § 43, subdivision 4.) Whether the process though proper in form, is allowed by law, in this case; and,
2. (Ibid, subdivision 6.) Whether the process is authorized by a judgment, order or decree of a court, or by a provision of law.
Second.—That an action on the custom against an innkeeper or common carrier, is founded in tort or misfeasance, and not on contract.
Third.—That in such an action, a defendant cannot properly be held to bail, except,, under section 179, by order of a judge, on proof, in addition to the facts constituting the cause of action, that defendant is a non-resident of the state, or is about to remove therefrom.
Fourth.—That as the record of judgment in such a case does