52 Iowa 134 | Iowa | 1879
I. Upon the trial of the cause the defendant introduced evidence tending to show that the property attached was his only team, with which he, as a farmer, habitually earned his living; that he was the head of a family, and that the removal of his property, which was the ground of attachment, was but temporary, the team and wagon being used to .enable him to make a journey from which he expected to return to his family in four or live months.
• The court instructed the jury that if the defendant was about to remove his'property out of the State without leaving sufficient remaining for the payment of his debts the attachment was not wrongfully issued, and refused instructions asked by defendant to the effect that a temporary removal by defendant of the property attached out of the State without leaving sufficient for the payment of his debts, for the purpose of conveying him upon his journey, with the intention on his part of returning to his home in the State in a few months, constituted no legal ground for issuing the attachment.
The statute provides that an attachment may issue when the petition shows that the defendant “ is about- to remove his property out of the State without leaving sufficient remaining for the payment of his debts.” Code, .Sec. 2951, p. 3. We
This conclusion certainly accords with justice and good policy. It would be a gross hardship to subject the owner of a hack, who has no other property, to attachment on the ground that in the prosecution of his business he is about to drive it temporarily out of the State. Other cases of equal hardship could be stated. We know of no decision in conflict with our conclusion. Mingus v. McLeod, 25 Iowa, 452, cited by plaintiff’s counsel, holds that the act of removal of property, not temporary removal, partakes of the character of a legal fraud and will authorize the issuing of an attachment. We reach the conclusion that the court below erred in its rulings upon the instructions.
III. The defendant insists that, as he was the head of a family and by the use of the property he habitually earned his living, it is exempt from seizure upon attachment. But no such question is raised by the assignment of errors, which only assails the rulings upon the instructions. The question was not passed upon in these rulings, as no instruction was given
For the error above pointed out the judgment of the Circuit Court is
Reversed.