57 Conn. 471 | Conn. | 1889
A justice of the peace rendered a judgment against the plaintiff and issued an execution. The plaintiff brought this suit to restrain the levy of it. The court below rendered judgment for the defendants and the plaintiff appealed.
The first question arises under the plaintiff’s claim that
The court found that the complaint was properly served, and that the defendant in the suit was guilty of negligence in not trying to ascertain the return day if he was in doubt. This is assigned as a reason of appeal.
The ruling of the court was clearly right. The plaintiff was bound to take reasonable measures to ascertain the return day. A careful reading of the copy would have told him, especially as the third was Sunday. Inquiry of the officer, or a letter to the justice, would have obtained the desired information. Common prudence suggests that some such measure should have been taken.
The refusal to hear evidence as to the merits of the plaintiff’s defense at the time when it was offered was not objectionable. That was only material in case there was no service. As there was service he had allowed the time for making his defense to go by.
The execution was against the body of the plaintiff. It commanded the officer to arrest the body of the plaintiff and “ dispose of the same according to law.” The officer who had it to serve, and each of the parties to it, with his counsel, met and discussed, among other things, the validity of the execution. When they separated the plaintiff was allowed to go his own way. That execution was returned or destroyed, and the justice, without noticing it or referring to it, issued another. Before the officer could serve that further proceedings were arrested by this suit and an injunction.
On the trial below a question was made whether there was an arrest under the first execution; and if there was, it was claimed that the second was illegal and would not
The fact that in issuing the second execution the first was not noticed is of no consequence. If the first was so defective as to be illegal, as claimed, then it was properly treated as void. If not void, still the omission to notice or to state that the second was an alias, did not invalidate the second.
There is no error in the judgment appealed from.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.