13 Or. 369 | Or. | 1886
The appellant Suksdorff commenced a suit in the court below against the respondents to have certain attachment proceedings taken by the latter against J. S. Danford and D. Ainsworth, partners under the name of Spokane County Bank, declared fraudulent and void; and to have attachment proceedings he had taken against said parties decreed to have priority over those of the respondents. It appears that the said Danford & Ainsworth, who evidently are a couple of knaves engaged in the banking business at Spokane Falls, in Washington Territory, and received deposits, discounted notes, and dealt in exchange; that about the seventeenth day of September, 1884, they failed in business, having at the time a large number of promissory notes in the possession of the First National Bank of
The respondents filed answers in said suit, and upon the hearing thereof, the Circuit Court dismissed the complaint, and from the decree entered thereon this appeal is brought. The said Yandell did not, however, join in the appeal. The appellants claim that the respondents were not entitled to have attachments issued in their said actions, for the reason that said actions were in tort and not upon contract, and that their procurement of said attachment to be issued was a fraud on the appellants’ rights in the premises.
No attachment against the property of another can legally issue in this state in any action except an action upon contract, expressed or implied, for the direct payment of money; and an attempt to procure the issuance of such process in any other kind of action is unauthorized, and the process, if issued, would be a nullity. ' But the respondents’ counsel claims that their said actions were not in tort; that they were upon contract, and that they were entitled, under the law, to have attachments issued therein. Under the Civil Code of this state, there are no forms of action in actions at law. It expressly abolishes them. Their nature and character must therefore be ascertained from an examination of the facts alleged constituting the cause.
The original complaint in Bigham’s action is not a comely pleading, certainly. It would be difficult to describe its quality. The first count, which is more objectionable than any of the others, alleges, after the introductory part, the following: “And that on the twenty-sixth day of August, 1884, one John Bigham deposited with the defendants $100, to be sent to Seaboard Bank, New York, and $250 to be sent to First National Bank of Portland, Oregon; and that the defend
I do not know how a court would he able to conclude that an amendment of the complaint in an action in which an attachment had issued would operate to dissolve the attachment, although a greater sum was demanded in the amended complaint than in the original,, if the amendment were allowed in furtherance of justice. The attachment is only collateral to the action. The amendment, in such case, has no connection with it, and an exercise of the right cannot possibly mislead a subsequent attaching creditor to his injury, as his rights in the property attached are subject to such right of amendment. The Code provides that any pleading may be once amended by the party, of course without costs and without prejudice to the proceedings already had at any time before the period for answering shall expire. (Civil Code, sec. 97.) And thereafter, at certain stages in the action, such amendment may be allowed by the court, upon such terms as may he just and proper. It cannot be unlawful to exercise a privilege accorded by law, especially where it is secured and acted upon in good faith. If the amendment had been made for the purpose of obtaining an undue advantage over the appellants, it would present a different question, but there is not the slightest proof in the case that such was the object. On the contrary, it appears that it was in furtherance of justice, and that ought not to prejudice the said respondents. It is not shown from the record that the amendment included any new cause of action, or embraced any other claim than was contained in the original complaint; and I think it
The chief justice concurs herein, except as to the effect of the amendment.