179 Mich. 580 | Mich. | 1914
Relator was arrested upon a 'capias ad respondendum sued out of the circuit court of Kent county in an action there commenced against him by Charles 0. Smedley as plaintiff. He thereupon furnished bail in the sum of $500, that being the amount indorsed upon said writ by the circuit judge, and later moved the court, through his counsel, for an order quashing the writ and dismissing all proceedings in said cause. This motion was denied, and relator seeks by mandamus from this court to compel the circuit court to grant said motion. The case is now before, us on return to an order from this court to show cause why a writ of mandamus should not issue.
The action in which the capias sought to be quashed issued, entitled Smedley v. Tidey, was brought to re
The various grounds for relator’s motion to quash are correctly summarized in respondent’s return as-follows:
“(a) The action is not one sounding in tort.
“(b) The affidavits of Charles H. Lillie and Charles O. Smedley are not based upon their personal knowledge.
“(c) J. R. Moodie & Sons, Limited, is a foreign limited copartnership, and is not authorized to do business in this State.
“(d) Charles O. Smedley, the plaintiff, is an attorney at law, and the assignment of this claim and cause of action to him is void under sections 1135 and 1136 of the Compiled Laws of 1897.
“(e) The affidavit of James Moodie was not properly executed in compliance with the provisions of Act No. 191 of the Public Acts of 1909.”
Moodie’s affidavit, purporting to have been sworn to before a notary public in the Province of. Ontario, Canada, is concededly not authenticated in accordance with our statutory requirements, and must be eliminated from consideration.
Relator’s claim that the proceedings are void because Smedley took an assignment of the claim and brought the action in his own name is based upon the provisions of section 1135, 1 Comp. Laws, that:
“No attorney, solicitor or counsellor shall, directly or indirectly, buy, or be in any manner interested in buying, any bond, promissory note, bill of exchange,*583 book debt or other thing in action, with the intent and for the purpose of bringing any suit thereon.”
It appears that, for some time prior to commencing the action in which this capias was issued, the law firm of Smedley, Linsey & Lillie, of which plaintiff was a member, held this claim for collection, and had instituted proceedings to collect it in the name of Moodie & Sons, which were discontinued. On October 3, 1913, said law firm wrote relator’s attorneys, giving notice of discontinuance of the case of Moodie & Sons v. Tidey, and saying:
“We have started suit here. James R. Moodie & Son are not longer concerned in this matter, the claim belongs to Charles O. Smedley, and the case is now Charles O. Smedley against Charles H. Tidey.”
Counsel for relator urge, “The record shows overwhelmingly that this claim was bought by Mr. Smedley ‘with the intent and for the purpose of bringing suit thereon,’ ” and therefore the action in his name is a clear violation of the statute.
The statute in question has been before this court several times, and has been construed as not prohibiting transfers to agents or attorneys for convenience of suit or by way or security, where the plaintiff is not shown to have bought the claim solely with intent to prosecute it for the purpose of profit. Town v. Tabor, 34 Mich. 262, 267; Herbstreit v. Beckwith, 35 Mich. 93; Smedley v. Dregge, 101 Mich. 200 (59 N. W. 411); Belden v. Blackman, 118 Mich. 448 (76 N. W. 979). While the statement in counsel’s letter that the claim belongs to Smedley, and Moodie & Sons are no longer concerned in the matter may tend to raise an issue as to a violation of the statute, it is not an issue triable on affidavits in this preliminary proceeding, but rather for disposition at the trial of the case on the proofs there produced.
The contention that J. R. Moodie & Sons, Limited,
The remaining question is. whether the affidavits of Lillie and Smedley filed in support of the capias state a cause of action sounding in tort, based on personal knowledge.
In brief, the affidavit of Smedley states his residence; that he owns the claim in question, which is for the sum of $425; that it is based on a certain check, a copy of which, with indorsements, is set out in full; that said check was made by, and said claim formerly belonged to, Moodie & Sons, who assigned the same to him; that the check was wrongfully converted by relator to his own use, and he has not paid the same to deponent or his assignor. Reference is also mad© to the attached affidavits of Lillie and Moodie for fuller description and particulars.
The somewhat lengthy affidavit of Lillie purports to state facts coming within his personal knowledge, or derived from statements and admissions made to him by relator. Amongst other things, it states that J. R. Moodie & Sons, a limited copartnership of Hamilton, Ontario, being indebted in the sum of $425 to the “Grand Rapids. Textile Machinery Company,” then located in Grand Rapids, Mich., on November 27, 1911, sent their check for said amount to Grand Rapids for the purpose of paying said indebtedness; that said check was made out and mailed to the“Grand Rapids Machinery Company,” the word “Textile” being omitted by a clerical error from the name; that relator was doing' business at Greenville, Mich., under
While it may not directly aid to establish technical sufficiency of the affidavits on which the capias issued, yet, as bearing on his claim of oppression and unfair treatment, in an application for a writ which is not strictly one of right, we note that relator, in his affidavit on which the motion to quash is based, admits, in substance, the unlawful conversion of the money, stating in extenuation “that the defendant had spent the money received thereon before he knew that it did not belong to him.”
The affidavits referred to are not stated to be upon information and belief, but purport personal knowledge by affiants of the facts related, stating circumstances and admissions of defendant from which the essential facts tending to establish a tort may properly be deduced with reasonable certainty, sufficient to authorize the capias. We think the affidavits show an unlawful conversion of the check and its proceeds.
The writ of. mandamus prayed for is denied.