1 Mass. 104 | Mass. | 1804
The action was originally commenced, by the present plaintiffs, together with one James Chace, against the present defendant and one Nathaniel Lyon, upon whom the writ was not served; and the action was prosecuted against Maxwell only. The declaration was as follows, viz., Nathaniel Lyon, card-maker, and Level Maxwell, merchant, both of Warren, in the county of Bristol, and state of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, were attached to answer to Jamas Chace, Barzillai Walker, and Daniel Eddy, all of Somerset, in thi county of Bristol, in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, merchants, late traders, trading under the firm of James Chace
Plea in bar.—And the said Level Maxwell comes and defends when, &c., and says that the plaintiffs their action aforesaid in manner aforesaid against him ought not to have and maintain, because he says, that after the time of making and signing the note or memorandum set forth in the plaintiffs’ declaration, an action was brought and prosecuted by Ebenezer Cole, of Warren, in the county of Bristol, in the state of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, mariner, at the Court of Common Pleas begun and holden at Bristol, within and for the county of Bristol, in the said state of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, on the first Monday of June, in the year of our Lord 1802, against the said James Chace, one of the plaintiffs in this action, by the name and addition of James Chace of Somerset, in the county of Bristol, in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, merchant, wherein the said Ebenezer Cole declared against the said James Chace, in the words following, to wit, “ Bristol, ss. Court of Common Pleas, June Term, A. D. 1802. Ebenezer Cole, of Warren, in said county of Bristol, mariner, complains of James Chace, of Somerset, in the county of Bristol and commonwealth of Massachusetts, merchant, in the custody of the sheriff, in an action of the case, for that the said James [ * 106 ] at Providence, viz., at said Bristol, on the eighth #day of October, A. D. 1799, by his note of hand of that date, by him signed, for value received, promised one Samuel Ames to pay him or order the sum of one hundred and twenty-eight dollars and seventy-two cents in six months, with interest after three months
And the said Maxwell further says, that the said Ebenezer Cole, pursuant to the statute of the state of Rhode Island and, Providence Plantations, in such case made and provided, endorsed on the back of the original writ in the same action the words following, viz., “ To the sheriff charged with the service of this writ; for the want of the body or visible estate of the within-named James Chace, to be by you found in your precinct whereon to make service of this writ, * serve Nathaniel Lyon, card-maker, and Level [ * 107 ] Maxwell, merchant, both of Warren, in our said county of Bristol, with copies hereof, for the purpose of attaching the personal estate of the said James in their hands; David L. Barnes, plaintiff’s attorney.” And thereupon, in pursuance of the statute aforesaid, on the twentieth day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and two, at eleven o’clock in the forenoon, S. K., who was then a deputy sheriff in the same county of Bristol, and who was charged with the service of the same writ, duly and legally served the said Nathaniel Lyon and Level Maxwell with copies thereof, and made his return thereon in the words following, viz., “ Bristol, ss. at Warren, January 20th, 1802, at eleven o’clock in the forenoon, for want of the body of the within-named James Chace or his estate to be by me found, I then served the aforesaid Nathaniel Lyon and Level Maxwell, as directed, with copies of this writ and orders, for the purpose mentioned in my orders, according to law, pr. Shubael Kinnecut, D. Sheriff.”—And at the same Court of Common Pleas, holden as last aforesaid, the same action was duly entered, and the said Nathaniel Lyon and Level Maxwell, pursuant to the statute aforesaid, appeared and submitted themselves to an examination on oath, before the same court, in the same cause.
“ Bristol, ss. To the honorable Court of Common Pleas to be holden at Bristol, in and for the county of Bristol, on the second Monday in January, A. D. 1803. Ebenezer Cole, of Warren, in the county of Bristol, merchant, complains of Level Maxwell, merchant,
To this plea the plaintiffs demurred, and assigned for causes of demurrer—1. That the said Level has not in his said plea averred that the transaction set forth in his said plea happened [* 112 ] or took * place within the county of Bristol, in the commonwealth of Massachusetts; therefore the same are not within the jurisdiction of this Court.
2. Because it does not appear by said plea that the said James Chace, Walker, and Eddy, or either of them, ever had notice of the several actions aforesaid in said plea set forth, or either of them.
3. Because it does not appear by said plea what the said statute or law is, which is mentioned as a statute in said plea; nor by what law or authority the said Court of Common Pleas, in said Bristol county, in said state of Rhode Island, gave the said judgment de scribed in said plea.
5. Because the defendant in his said plea has not mentioned and stated how the property in said note, mentioned and described in the writ and declaration of the plaintiffs, became the property of the said James Chace, as mentioned in the defendant’s said plea; but has in his said plea alleged, as a fact, that which is not true in fact.
6. Because the said plea is uncertain, multifarious, inconsistent, contradictory and informal.
And lastly, Because the allegations in said plea are made without authority, and without any law of any state, kingdom, republic, or nation, to support, warrant, or justify the same.
The defendants joined in demurrer.
While the present action was pending in the Court of Common Pleas in this county, the said James Chace died; his death was entered on the record there, and that Court admitted Sally Chace, the administratrix of his estate, to come in, and, with the surviving plaintiffs, to take upon herself the prosecution of the suit; and the case came up *to this Court in the names of the [*113] said administratrix, and of Walker and Eddy, as plaintiffs. This Court said the administratrix was improperly admitted, that the action must be prosecuted by the survivors only; and directed the record to be amended by striking out the name of the administratrix.
The whole Court (Strong, Sedgwick, Sewall, and Thacher, justices) were of opinion that the plea in bar, for the third cause of demurrer assigned, was insufficient and bad;
objected to the amendment. He said that, by a rule of this Court, after demurrer joined and argued, the Court never permitted an amendment; but if the Court should think that in such cases they might in their discretion permit an amendment, they would never grant it, except for the purpose of doing substantial justice; that it was obvious from the pleadings, the justice and equity of this case was with the plaintiffs; the defendant himself had negotiated the note to Cole-, on which the action was brought in the state of Rhode Island, and was, therefore, the agent in procuring that process against himself, [ * 114 ] * on which he now relies to bar the demand of the plaintiffs in the present action ; that circumstance, he said, afforded pretty strong evidence that the suit in Rhode Island was brought by the collusion of the defendant and Cole; the plea does not allege any notice of the suit in Rhode Island to either of the partners; in the second process in that state the debt is described as due to Chace alone, which in the answer in the first action there is described as due to the partnership. In the common cases of taking the personal property of a tenant in common, and selling the same on an execution, all that can be taken and sold is the part which the judgment-debtor owns; and the vendee acquires that part only, and becomes tenant in common with the other owners ; but a chose in action cannot be taken and disposed of in that Way ; nor is there any mode by which one joint promisee can transfer his right to a chose in action so as to put his assignee in his place, and make such assignee a joint promisee. Had Cole, therefore, in his suit against Chace, attached the goods of the partners, he could not on his judgment and execution have disposed of the whole, but only of the share in them which Chace might have owned, and the vendee would have become tenant in common of the goods so sold, with the other partners. He concluded by saying that no amendment which the defendant could make, could avail him, because the law would never permit a debt due to three persons who are partners, to be taken by this process of foreign attachment, and holden to satisfy the separate debt of one of the partners; which was the case disclosed by the defendant’s plea; and was in fact the case upon which the defendant must ultimately rely, whatever amendment he might otherwise make in his pleadings.
L. Wheaton, in reply, said the defendant could prove [ * 115 ] notice of the suits in Rhode Island to have * been given to the parties; and, therefore, by inserting the proper averment in a new plea, one objection would be obviated; as to the collusion suggested by the counsel for the plaintiff, the Court would not presume fraud; if the judgment in Rhode Island were fraudu
The defendant had leave to amend on payment of costs.
See 2 East Rep. 260, Cobbett & Al. vs Lord Keith.
See ante, p. 96, Holbrook vs. Pratt, where an amendment of the declaration after joinder in demurrer was refused. The pleadings have been given at length to show Che difference of proceeding in Rhode Island and in Massachusetts upon a process of foreign attachment.