Court Opinion

ID: 6555260
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 18:57:11.475339+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:15.995555
License: Public Domain

Uorb C. J:—
This is an application to the Court to award a
writ of foreign attachment, upon the return of non est upon a summons issued against the defendant ten days before the return thereof, in an action to recover damages for injuries sustained by reason of the defendant’s tort, in failing to provide a safe place for one of defendant’s employes.
The question is whether foreign attachment will lie on mesne process, in cases sounding in tort.
The statute governing this subject is found in Section 19, Chapter 104, page 785, Revised Code, and is as follows: “A writ of foreign attachment may be issued against any person not an inhabitant of this State, after a return to a- summons, or capias, issued and delivered to the sheriff, or coroner, ten days before the return thereof, showing that the defendant cannot be found, and proof, satisfactory to the Court, of the cause of action ; or upon affidavit made by the plaintiff, or some other credible person, and filed with the prothonotary, that the defendant resides out of the State, and is justly indebted to the said plaintiff, in a sum exceeding fifty dollars. ’ ’
If the case is within the statute, it is admitted that the writ must be awarded under the first clause, upon the return of a writ of summons or capias issued ten days before the return thereof, showing that the defendant cannot be found, and proof satisfactory to the Court of the cause of action.
It is claimed by the plaintiff, that upon such return, and proof to the Court of a reasonably fair prima facie cause of. action,. *364that a writ of foreign attachment should be awarded, even though it be for a tort. It is simply a question of the construction of our own statute.
The writ of foreign attachment is based primarily upon the fact that the defendant resides out of the State. To entitle the plaintiff, therefore, to the said writ, such non residence must appear.
The statute provides two methods by which this fact may be shown, prima facie, as the foundation for the awarding of the writ; first, by the return to a writ of summons or capias, which discloses on its face that the defendant cannot be found in the jurisdiction ; second, by the affidavit of the plaintiff or some credible person, as to the fact of such non residence. But neither such return, nor affidavit, is conclusive as to non residence, which if contradicted, must be proved in either case, before judgment can be had. It is manifest, therefore, that the return on the writ in the one case, and the affidavit in the other, only go to make a prima facie case of non residence, which is a condition precedent to the awarding of the writ.
Where affidavit is made, it must also appear that the defendant is justly indebted to the plaintiff ; on the return of the writ, proof satisfactory to the Court of the cause of action, must be made. It is contended that under the last clause, actions sounding in damages in tort may be included.
If this clause stood alone, the words cause of action, would embrace actions in tort, but they must be construed with all the rest of the statute.
Wherever in the statute the subject matter for which it is a remedy is expressly referred to, it is uniformly designated as a debt or indebtedness; and the actors are spoken of as creditor and debtor. The statute therefore in its express terms, seems to be based upon the existence of a subsisting indebtedness as the foundation of the right to the writ.
It must be borne in mind that this is not a common law remedy. It is purely the creature of the statute, and has been quite uniformly viewed as a violent proceeding, by which the *365property of the defendant is taken and seized upon, before the claim is judicially determined by a competent Court of law; and has therefore been uniformly strictly construed.
Vogle vs. The New Grenada, etc. Co., 1 Houst., 294; Pennsylvania Steel Co. vs. R. R. Co., 4 Houst., 578; and the case of the National Bank vs. Furtick, 2 Marvel.
We have been unable to find a single case, where actions in tort have been held to be within the foreign attachment statute, unless the statute expressly so provided. This is the result of all the cases.
Under similar statutes in most of the states the courts have held, that the remedy is confined to actions ex contractu, and many hold that it will be awarded only for liquidated damages.
Drake on Attachment, sec. 10226; 3 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, 134, 138, 191; Porter vs. Hildebrand, 14 Pa. St., 129; Warwick vs. Chase, 23 Md., 154; Jeffrys vs. Woolley, 10 N. J. Law, 123; Chattick vs. Marsh, 21 N. J. Law, 463; Stanley vs. Ogden, 2 Root (Ct.,) 259; Griswold vs. Sharpe, 2 Cala., 17; Reed vs. Beach, 2 Pinney ( Wis.,) 6.
While we are not prepared to say that the cause of action must be for a liquidated demand, we are clearly of the opinion that foreign attachment will not lie under our statute for actions sounding in tort.
We therefore refuse to award the writ of foreign attachment.