17 Ala. 167 | Ala. | 1850
The court below decided the points of law raised in this case upon the trial very correctly.
1. The cost in defending the suit in which the ancillary attachment was sued out, the plaintiff in that suit having failed, has no connection with the attachment. The ancillary attachment was but auxiliary to the main suit, and enabled the plaintiff to obtain a lien on property for the satisfaction of whatever judgment, he might recover. No issue of fact was raised or could have been raised by the defendant, as predicated upon the attachment. The grounds upon which it issued cannot by the terms of the statute authorising it he controverted so as to require proof. The argument of the plaintiff’s counsel, that we must intend the plaintiff was incited to greater diligence in making his defence, and therefore incurred more cost, from the fact that the attachment secured the ultimate payment of the judgment, should one be obtained, is unsound. We must intend that White would have paid the debt had the court so ordered and adjudged. Damage, the consequence of a contrary presumption, would neither be the legitimate, natural nor proximate result of the attachment. — Donnell v, Jones, 13 Ala. Rep. 490, and authorities (¿ted.
2. Proof of the previous proceeding instituted against the makers of the note and the return of non est, &c. was proper in mitigation of damages, since it tended to show the want of malice, and that the party in suing White, the endorser, was not actuated by improper motives. There is a marked difference in honestly and in good faith suing out an attachment under a mis
Judgment affirmed.