Court Opinion

ID: 7110450
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:25:48.776101+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:14.680530
License: Public Domain

Laud, J.
The sum of $114 was found due the landlprd 'for rent accrued, precisely as alleged in his' petition, and the tenant was allowed $400 on his counterclaim. Oon-*370wary to appellant’s contention, this was a' finding that something was due plaintiff, within the meaning of our statutes. Section 2992 of the Code creates a lien for rent in favor of the landlord, and the-section folio wing provides that the lien may “be effected by the commencement of .an action during the period above prescribed for rent alone, in which action the landlord will be entitled to a writ of attachment, upon- filing with the clerk or- justice a verified petition stating that the action is commenced to recover rent accrued within one year previous thereto upon premises described in the petition, and the procedure thereunder shall be the same, as nearly as may be, as in other cases of attachment, except no bond shall be required.” As therent had accrued, the defendant might resort to this remedy, provided he followed the procedure prescribed i attach-discounter claim-hy Quinary attachments. Section 3889 of the Code requires the petition, when the action is on contract, to “state that something is due and, as nearly as practicable, the amount.” This is to serve as a guide to the sheriff, who must levy on property one and one-half times in value such amount. Section 3881. Where the action is not based on contract, the allowance in value of property to be levied on must be fixed by the judge. Section 3882. Section 3883 relates to the suing out of a writ of attachment “on debts not due when nothing but time is wanting to fix an absolute indebtedness,” additional grounds therefor to be stated in the petition. It is manifest from these statutes that the word “due,” as used in them, has reference to the maturity of the claim, rather than the balance of indebtedness owing from one party to the other. What must be alleged is that something is due. On what? The contract sued on, and the amount thereof, are to be stated. Something may be owing by the plaintiff to the defendant in another transaction, but if it has not been applied in payment, such debt continues unimpaired, and defendant may elect not *371to plead it as a set-off or counterclaim, but to make it the subject of a separate and distinct action. Jones v. Witousek, 114 Iowa, 14. The petitioner then has no right to assume that defendant will interpose what will be owing him by way of a set-off or counterclaim, rather than institute a separate action, and all required is that he state with reasonable accuracy the amount due him under the contract on which the action is based.
In the instant case the items demanded by the tenant, whether in the way of unliquidated damages or disputed charges for the services rendered, were not payments, and were not allowed as such by. the court. They were pleaded by way of counterclaim, and, as such, applied to the extent necessary by way of deduction. Hone of the cases cited by the appellant treat “set off” or “counterclaim” as synonymous with “payment.” See Eldredge v. Bell, 64 Iowa, 125; Ware v. Howley, 68 Iowa, 633; Van Sandt v. Dows, 63 Iowa, 594; Union Mill Co. v. Prenzer, 100 Iowa, 540; Lucore v. Kramer, 22 Iowa, 387. They proceed on the theory that the representative of the deceased in the matter of the collection of debts due an estate merely steps into the shoes of his decedent, and must maintain his action subject to like defenses or counterclaim's. As indicated in the last case cited, in ascertaining the amount to be awarded, “mutual claims compensate each other,” and “the amount which may be due is always the balance left after deducting the lesser from the greater sum,” precisely as though the action had been brought by deceased in his lifetime. But this is not saying they have been previously so applied.
We are not to be understood as intimating that malice and want of probable cause are necessarily to be inferred from a finding of nothing due. In such a case the writ 2. malicious writ. has been wrongfully issued, but, in the absence of statute, this alone will not warrant the recovery of damages. Tallant v. Burlington Gaslight *372Co., 36 Iowa, 262; Frantz v. Hanford, 87 Iowa, 469; Car-raher v. Allen, 112 Iowa, 168. It is because of section 3887 of the Code, providing for recovery on the bond, that damages for the mere wrongful suing out of the writ are allowed. Porter v. Wilson, 4 G. Greene, 314; Young v. Broadbent, 23 Iowa, 539. On the strength of- these decisions so holding, the court seems to have applied the-same rule in the case of a landlord’s writ of attachment,, issued without bond, in the absence of any similar statute. Harger v. Spofford, 46 Iowa, 11, cited with apparent approval in Sigler v. Murphy, 107 Iowa, 128. In the first of these the theory on which damages were allowed by the-jury does not appear, and the last was remanded for new-trial.- It would seem these decisions can only be upheld, on the theory that from a finding of nothing due the inference of want of probable cause and of malice may be-drawn. If so, such inference is permissible only, and the-subject to be rebutted by other evidence introduced and circumstances established on the trial. But whether this-be so or not, the mere finding that more was owing defendant in the former suit on the counterclaim than was due plaintiff therein on the petition does not, alone, justify the conclusion that plaintiff was actuated by malice. He might have been entirely ignorant of the adverse claims-at the time of suing out the writ.
The jury was properly directed. — Apeirmed.
Bishop, O. J., taking no part.