Court Opinion

ID: 8257221
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:32:59.865514+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:02.318131
License: Public Domain

Handy, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an attachment for debt, issued by and returnable before a justice of the peace, by whom a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. The case was then taken by the defendant to the Circuit Court by appeal, and a motion was there made in his behalf to quash the attachment, because the affidavit on which it was founded was insufficient in law: this motion was granted, and hence the plaintiff brings the case here.
The only question necessary to be considered, is the sufficiency of the affidavit. After stating that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum demanded, it states that the plaintiff “ has been credibly informed, and verily believes, that the, defendant is about to remove from this State, so that the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon him, and he therefore prays an attachment,” &c.
This affidavit and the attachment issued, appear to have been based upon the sixth section of the Act of 1822. Hutch. 801. And the only point of inquiry is, whether the provisions of that section, are applicable to attachments for debts within the jurisdiction of justices of the peace.
The provisions of the section extend in terms to “ any creditor” whose debtor hath removed or is removing out of this State, &c., and give him an attachment against the estate of such debtor, to be made returnable to the next term of the court where the suit is properly cognizable, &c. There is nothing in the language employed in the section, showing that it was intended to exclude small debts from the benefit of the remedy provided, and no reason can be perceived why such debts should be excluded.
But it is said, that such debts are provided for by the thirteenth section of the same Act, which provides, that upon complaint on oath, made to a justice of the peace, that any person indebted in a sum within the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace hath removed or is removing out of the county where the debt was contracted, &c., such justice shall grant an attachment, &c. Hutch. 808. But this section does not necessarily, or by just construction, ex-*533elude persons holding small debts from the benefit of the provisions of the sixth section. That section gave the remedy to any creditor whose debtor had removed, &c., from the State; this section extends the remedy further in favor of small debts, by allowing it against a debtor who had removed, &c., out of the county where the debt was contracted. It is not inconsistent with the previous section, and does not exclude the creditor from the remedy of attachment against his debtor removed or removing out of the State; for that would present the most improbable case of the remedy of attachment given to a creditor having a small debt against his debtor removing out of the county where the debt was contracted, but denying it to him when the debtor was removing out of the State.
The mistake in the name of the defendant, in the affidavit, is merely clerical, and will not vitiate the proceedings.
The judgment is clearly erroneous, and it is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.