82 Me. 412 | Me. | 1890
In this (trustee) action, the question is whether the funds, admitted to be in the trustees’ hands, shall be held by the plaintiff’s attachment, or go to the claimant by force of an assignment to him from the principal defendant.
The funds consist of an amount due the defendant as Avages for working by the month, in the plantation of Elliotsville, with a steam drill, under contractors who Avere constructing the Canadian Pacific railroad; the defendant working in that capacity continuously from the spring of 1887, for a year and more. His legal residence during that time was in the town of Monson where his homestead and family were, but he lived all the time in camp in Elliotsville during the period of his working there, excepting that on most of the Sundays, not all of them, he visited his home in Monson, going there on Saturday afternoon and returning to Elliotsville on the afternoon of Sunday.
Process was served on the trustees March 15, 1888. The written assignment from defendant to claimant is dated August 27, 1887, was recorded in the town records of Monson, August 29, 1887, and in Elliotsville, March 30, 1888.
The railroad workmen received their pay as made out on monthly — roll bills, and the trustees disclose $59.50 due the defendant on the February (1888) rolls, and $30.95 due on the March (1888) rolls up to March 15th.
It will be observed that the assignment to claimant was seasonably recorded to obtain priority over the attachment, if Monson
The statute relied on by the plaintiff as governing the question (R. S., c. 111, § 6), reads as follows: “No assignment of wages is valid against any other person than the parties thereto, unless such assignment is recorded by the clerk of the city, town or plantation organized for any purpose in which the assignor is commorant, while earning such wages.”
Was the defendant, Lemuel Monk, commorant in Elliotsville while working there in February and March 1888? We can see no escape from the conclusion that he was. It cannot be doubted that a man may be a resident in one place and commorant in another at the same time. The distinction is between a permanent and a temporary home. Ames v. Winsor, 19 Pick. 248. A commorancy may be all the residence a man has, but usually it is not. In Webster’s dictionary, commorancy is defined as meaning, in American law, “residence temporarily, or for a short time.” The term, from its derivation from the Latin, implies something less than a regular residence, such as a staying, a sojourning, and more literally, a tarrying. It was to express these minor degrees of residence that the word got in vague in - our jurisprudence, though not often used. Blackstone says in his commentaries, vol. 4, p. 278, that all freeholders within the precinct of Court Leet, “as well as all persons commorant there, which commorancy consists in usually lying there,” were obliged to attend the sessions of that court. We think the legislature used the term commorant in the sense of a temporary abiding place, to avoid the difficulty of ascertaining the legal residence of a great mass of laboring men, and because many of that class of people have no legal residence within the state. But the law must be general in its application. It was immaterial that the debtor in this case had a legal and well defined home in Monson, as he was as much commorant in Elliotsville as were the hundreds of laborers associated in the same employment. The record should have been made there.
It is contended for the claimant that the assignment, though
It is further contended that the claimant had also a verbal assignment, of a date earlier than the attachment, of that portion of the wages of the defendant which were earned in February, and that the statute requirement does not extend to that amount of the wages. The position taken is that the February wages were-fully earned. In Wright v. Smith, 74 Maine, 495, it was held that the statute did not apply to a case where the work had been completed and the wages fully earned. The laborer was then no longer at work. But in the present case, though the wages for February were payable at the end of February, still it was a continuing employment and the engagement was not ended. We should be afraid that the distinction called for, if allowed to prevail, would make the statute uncertain in its operation, depriving it of much or most of its useful effect.
It is objected that the wages were not due when attached. But the disclosure admits that they were due, though not payable until a later day.
It is contended that the trustee can retain twenty dollars of the wages as exempted from attachment, because it does not appear that the articles sued for were necessaries furnished the defendant and his family. The learned counsel for the defense, has overlooked - a statement in the beginning of the report: “This is an action for articles furnished the defendant and his family, as more fully appears by the plaintiff’s writ, to be copied.” The writ seems to be submitted to the court for inspection, to
Trustees charged.