Court Opinion

ID: 3497195
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:04:49.785236+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:54:56.981406
License: Public Domain

A judgment in tort in favor of plaintiffs Kirker against defendant Larson was affirmed by this court on condition that the amount thereof be reduced by the filing of proper remittitur (see Kirker v. Larson, 252 Mich. 136). The declaration filed in the lower court contained two counts in fraud and one in assumpsit, all relating to the same transaction. The assumpsit count was based upon an implied promise to repay the damages caused by the fraud; it ended with the common counts. The case was tried without a jury and the trial court specifically found defendant liable for fraud. The court said:
"It is just as much a legal fraud for one to make statements of which he has no knowledge or in reckless disregard of the truth as to make statements knowing them to be false."
There not having been any election or waiver of counts by plaintiffs, nor any general verdict by a jury, but a finding by the trial judge that defendant was guilty of fraud, it removed all uncertainty on what counts the judgment was based. It was on the fraud counts, and not on the common counts, of the declaration. On defendant's motion, the trial judge amended his findings by stating that defendant did not make any representations with specific and wilful intent to defraud. The judgment, however, remained one in tort.
Plaintiffs sued out a capias ad satisfaciendum or body execution. Defendant appeals from the order denying a motion to recall this body execution. He *Page 651 
claims that by combining the counts in tort with the one in assumpsit, plaintiffs waived the right to the issuance of a body execution; that on account of the court's amended findings the defendant was not guilty of specific and wilful intent to defraud; that the prohibition of the Constitution of the State of Michigan against imprisonment for debt protects defendant from being taken on a body execution.
Under 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14007, plaintiffs might have brought an action on the case for fraud or one in assumpsit arising out of an implied promise of repayment on account of the fraud. In either case, upon a proper declaration and affidavit being filed, a capias ad respondendum could have been issued. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14074; Mintz v. Jacob, 163 Mich. 280
. It was not improper to add the common counts to the special count in assumpsit arising out of implied promises of repayment on account of fraud. First National Bank v.Steel, 136 Mich. 588; Hogle v. Meyering, 161 Mich. 472. It would not have been proper to sue on the common counts without a special count. Burchy v. Carpenter, 181 Mich. 78. In the present case, as defendant was specifically found guilty of fraud, the common counts neither added to nor subtracted from the other claims set forth in the declaration and had the same effect as if they were surplusage.
Section 14075, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, in providing when a case may be started by a writ of capias ad respondendum on tort claims, states:
"Personal actions may be commenced by capias ad respondendum
in cases of claims for damages, other than those arising upon contract, express or implied, in like manner as stated in the preceding section." *Page 652 
No distinction is made in this section between torts that are wilful and those that are not; apparently all torts are included. Furthermore, it would be exceedingly difficult to determine when a misrepresentation was wilful and when it was not.
The objection is made by defendant, however, that article 2, § 20, of the Constitution of Michigan, prohibits the issuance of a capias ad respondendum in this case. It provides:
"No person shall be imprisoned for debt arising out of, or founded on a contract, express or implied, except in cases of fraud or breach of trust, or of moneys collected by public officers or in any professional employment."
In the instant case the judgment did not arise ex contractu.
It was one in tort, i. e., fraud in inducing a contract. It is true that a contract is involved but the wrong is the fraud from which damages resulted. In Forsythe v. Washtenaw CircuitJudge, 180 Mich. 633 (L.R.A. 1915A, 706), the court stated:
"It is obvious that the plaintiff in the principal case might have proceeded against relator under the Constitution as well as under the statute cited, supra, by causing to issue a writ of capias ad respondendum as commencement of suit."
The mere fact that the tort in the present case was an unintentional one does not change the nature of the wrong from a tort to a debt arising out of a contract.
Even had the liability of defendant arisen out of contract, "cases of fraud" are excepted from the quoted constitutional prohibition. There is no indication that cases involving unintentional fraud *Page 653 
were intended to be excepted. The affidavit in support of a writ of capias ad respondendum is sufficient without an allegation that the fraud was wilful. The order of the circuit judge refusing to quash the capias ad satisfaciendum is affirmed, with costs to plaintiffs.
WIEST, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, and FEAD, JJ., concurred.