16 Ala. 765 | Ala. | 1849
The point involved in this case is not free from difficulty. It is this: If just ground for an attachment exists, and one is sued out, but is afterwards abated, upon the
The condition of the bond declared bn is, “that the plaintiff should prosecute his attachment to effect, and pay the defendant all such costs and damages -as he may sustain by the wrongful or vexatious suing out 'the said attachment,” &c.— This court has several times decided that actions upon the bond, given by the plaintiff in an attachment suit, must be governed by the same rules as are applicable to actions upon the case. — Hill v. Rushing, 4 Ala. Rep. 213; Herndon v. Forney, ib. 243. It has further been held, that if the attachment was wrongfully sued out, but without malice or intention to vex the defendant, that only the actual damage which the pariy sustained can be recovered; but if both wrongfully and maliciously issued, then vindictive damages may be recovered.— McCullough et al. v. Walton, 11 Ala. Rep. 492; Donnell v. Jones, 13 ib. 490-501.
What is meant by the term “ wrongful,” as used in the statute to which this bond conforms ? Was it, as is contended for by the counsel for the defendant in error, designed to apply to defects in the form of the proceeding, on account of which the attachment should be quashed, as well as to the ground upon which it was to be.issued?- Or was the object of the framers of the act merely to provide a remedy against persons who should resort to this extraordinary remedy to the prejudice of another, without cause or sufficient ground therefor ? It is to my mind perfectly clear, that the latter construction is the correct one. The act of 1837 (Clay’s Dig. 61, § 32) provides, that when any original attachment shall have been wrongfully or vexatiously sued out, the defendant, may at any time commence suit against the plaintiff suing out the same, and recover any damages which he may have sustained, or to which he may be entitled on account thereof, whether such attachment suit be ended or not. And by the same statute the defendant in the attachment is denied the privilege of putting in issue the grounds upon which it issued. These enactments are conclusive to show that the right to recover damages ex
We think that, by the wrongful suing out of the attachment, is meant, not the omissions, irregularities or informalities which the officer issuing the process may have committed in its issuance, but that the party resorted to it without sufficient ground. The case of Kirksey v. Jones, 7 Ala. Rep. 622, not only fully sustains this view, but goes quite beyond it. So far as it conforms to this construction of the statute, we fully approve of that decision.
Our conclusion is, that the charge of the court was erro
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded.