Court Opinion

ID: 3676903
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:23:24.195621+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:24:43.641812
License: Public Domain

This action was brought to recover damages against the defendant for an alleged assault and battery with a deadly weapon — a pistol or metallic knuckles. The details of the battery are set forth in the complaint. There was a verdict for the plaintiff, and a judgment thereon was duly entered. An execution in the ordinary form was issued against the property of the defendant, the homestead exemption laid off by the sheriff, and no excess found liable to execution. Upon the return of the execution unsatisfied, the plaintiff applied to the clerk for an execution against the person of the defendant, under section 447 of The Code. The clerk refused the motion upon the grounds, first, that judgment was taken and docketed before any demand for an order of arrest; second, that the complaint made no demand for an order of arrest; third, the plaintiff accepted the judgment without an order of arrest; and, fourth, that no affidavit accompanied the motion for the order of arrest. His Honor reversed the action of the clerk who had refused to grant the motion.
Peebles v. Foote, 83 N.C. 102, is decisive of this case. The question is whether in such case execution can be issued against the person of a defendant without an order of arrest having been served before the judgment. The section of The Code under which the order of arrest was granted reads: "If the action be one in which the defendant might have been arrested, an execution against the person of the judgment debtor may be issued to any county within the State after the return of an execution against his property unsatisfied in whole or in part. But no execution shall issue against the person of a judgment debtor unless an order of arrest has been served as       (281) provided in Title Nine, subchapter 1 of this chapter, or unless the complaint contains a statement of facts showing one or more of the causes of arrest required by section 291." That section was amended by chapter 541, Laws 1891, by adding to the end of it these words, "whether such statement of facts be necessary to the cause of action or not." In Peebles v. Foote, supra, Ashe, J., for the Court, said: "The section 260 (C. C. P.), under which the defendant was arrested, contemplates three classes: (1) Where the cause of arrest is not set forth in the complaint; (2) where the cause of action is *Page 198 
set forth in the complaint, but is only collateral and extrinsic to the plaintiff's cause of action; (3) where the cause of arrest set forth in the complaint is essential to the plaintiff's action." Our case falls under the third class, and, as was said in Peebles v. Foote, supra, no affidavit for the order of arrest was needed, and no order of arrest is required before an execution may be issued against the person of the defendant, provided the complaint has been properly and sufficiently verified. The complaint was properly verified in the case before us. A cause of arrest was set forth in the complaint. The Code, sec. 291, subsec. 1; Carroll v.Montgomery, 128 N.C. 278; Kinney v. Laughenour, 97 N.C. 325.
The judge who made the order for the execution was the judge residing in the district, but was not the judge who was at that time holding the courts of the district, and, for that reason, the defendant contends that the order was void, the judge not having jurisdiction. The question for decision before the clerk was a mere matter of law, and the appeal was properly sent up to the judge residing in the district. The Code, secs. 254, 255.
No error.
Cited: Turlington v. Aman, 163 N.C. 559, 561.
(282)