4 Greene 314 | Iowa | 1854
Opinion by
Action on an attachment bond. The petition avers that the attachment was wrongfully and wilfully sued out by the defendants, Porter and Lucas, and that the plaintiff was not indebted to them. The defendants demurred to the petition, and for causes allege : 1. That the petition does not state that the defendant had not sufficient cause for believing that the facts stated in the affidavit for the attachment were true. 2. That the affidavit or the substance of it -is not stated in the petition. The demurrer was overruled, and judgment rendered against defendants.
1. In support of the first cause of demurrer, appellants refer us to the case of Winchester v. Cox,
An indebtedness is a reality. It is not a matter of mere speculation or inference, of supposition or belief, in relation to the motives of another. It is an absolute verity, and should be best known to him who claims it. A plaintiff is not dependent upon mere belief; he should know that the defendant is indebted to him before he is justified in attaching his property, and perhaps thus inflicting an irreparable inj ury. The evidences of an indebtedness are controlled by the creditor, and should be best known to him. He acts upon actual knowledge, not belief. A plaintiff should know that he has a legal demand against the defendant, before proceeding against him by attachment, and if he does proceed against him without such a demand, he cannot -avoid placing him in statu quo, by claiming that he had sufficient cause for believing that defendant was indebted to him. A party should never think of an attachment without knowing that he has a good cause of action. If, after knowing that, he has sufficient reason for believing that his debtor is acting in reference to those matters in the manner specified by the Code; then, and only then, will he be justified in that violent process.
In Winchester v. Cox, we use this language : “ If the conduct and reputation of the debtor, was that of a reliable and solvent business man; or if ho was not legally indebted to the plaintiff, he might then assume
2. in this case, under the averment of “ no indebtedness,” we can see no reason why the petition should give even the substance of the affidavit. The action is not fouud upon the affidavit, and as the petition contains a statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, and explicitly claims a remedy upon the bond, we cannot 'understand why the affidavit should be deemed material. In a case like the present, it is not necessary that the petition should make any averments in reference to the affidavitand we conclude that the court below did not err in overruling the demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.
Ante 121.