Citation Numbers: 103 A. 98, 132 Md. 160, 1918 Md. LEXIS 13
Judges: Briscoe
Filed Date: 1/16/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The appellee sued out an attachment on the 27th of April, 1917, in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, against the appellant, a non-resident of the State, and it was laid in the hands of the National Bank of Baltimore as garnishee, and the bank was summoned.
On the 1st of May, 1917, the absent defendant appeared and filed a petition under section 20 of Article 9 of the Code, for an immediate return of the writ before the return day, so as to permit a motion by him to quash and set aside the attachment and for an immediate hearing of the case. The prayer of the petition was granted, and on the 3rd of May, 1917, the defendant filed a motion to quash, alleging and urging six reasons in support of the motion.
Upon a hearing by the Court below the motion to quash was overruled and from this order so entered the defendant has appealed.
The first and fifth grounds relied upon in the Court below have been abandoned in this Court. The remaining four assigned in the motion and relied upon here are first: because the voucher annexed to the affidavit is not a sufficient cause *Page 162 of action; second, because no sufficient short note was filed with the attachment; third, because the claim or cause of action stated and set out in the annexed voucher and affidavit is for unliquidated damages; and fourth, because there was then pending in the Circuit Court for Harford County, by this plaintiff against the defendant, a similar attachment proceeding for the same cause of action, to which he was duly summoned and to which he appeared in the short note case, filed approved bond, and the Court on motion dissolved the attachment.
The proceeding by way of attachment against a non-resident debtor is in this State regulated and governed by statute. The jurisdiction of the Court in such cases is held to be special and limited and it is a proceeding that can only be maintained by a substantial compliance with the provisions and the requirements of the statute under which it is authorized. 2 Poe's Pl. andPr. 502; Franklin v. Claflin,
By section 4 of Article 9 of the Code it is provided: No attachment shall issue (except as hereinafter mentioned) unless there be an affidavit that the debtor is bona fide indebted to the creditor in the sum of * * *, over and above all discounts; and at the time of making the affidavit the creditor shall produce the bond, account and other evidences of debt, by which the said debtor is so indebted; and shall also make affidavit that he knows, or is credibly informed and verily believes that the said debtor is not a citizen of this State and that he doth not reside therein; or if the said debtor resides in this State, that he doth know, or is credibly informed and verily believes that the said debtor hath absconded.
In the present case the attachment suit was brought to recover the sum of five thousand three hundred and eighty-nine dollars and twenty-five cents, being an alleged balance due and owing from the defendant to the plaintiff on an account and contract produced and exhibited the items, debits *Page 163 and credits being set forth in the account and on the contract by which the defendant is alleged to be so indebted.
The short note is in the usual form and declares upon the common counts in assumpsit. The affidavit required by the statute is in proper form and contains the jurisdictional averments as a basis for the action.
The first objection raised by the appellant's motion is, that the voucher annexed to the affidavit is not a sufficient cause of action.
While the voucher and evidence of debt is required by the statute to be produced and must be annexed to the affidavit, it is well settled that if the bond, account or other evidence of debt so annexed show a prima facie case of indebtedness from the defendant to the plaintiff, it will be a sufficient basis for the attachment. A creditor is not required to produce all his proofs of the indebtedness, but it is sufficient if he files his cause of action and this shows on its face the specific, liquidated and ascertained debt sued for.
In White v. Solomonsky,
The account which is filed as the cause of action in this case and is set out on page 3 of the record is certain in its items and details and contains such statements as makes clear to the defendant what is the real nature and character of the claim. A specific and definite sum of money is set forth in each item of the account and these items show and give sufficient notice of the claim and charges for which the suit is brought. The amount due for each of the items is charged in the account and the aggregate amount of the debt amounted to $13,165.00. A particular and itemized list of the credits are set forth in the account and deducting these *Page 164 left a balance of $5,389.25, and this is the claim the plaintiff has averred by affidavit to be true and recoverable in this case.
As the account and contract which is annexed to the affidavit is the cause of action in this case and as it shows upon its face the specific, liquidated and ascertained indebtedness sued for, we think it was a substantial compliance with the statute and sufficient to support the attachment. Cox v. Waters,
The third reason assigned that no short note was filed with the attachment is manifestly not tenable. At the time the attachment was issued it appears that a declaration in assumpsit containing the common counts was filed. The short note is in proper form and contains a substantial statement of the plaintiff's claim and cause of action. Spear v. Griffin,
The defendant's fourth objection that the plaintiff's claim is for unliquidated damages and can not be recovered in this form of action is answered by what we said in disposing of the first contention.
The law is well settled as stated by Mr. Poe in his work onPleading, sec. 509, in attachment cases, that the cause of action may arise ex contractu and may be either for a fixed and definite amount or for damages already liquidated and ascertained or easily capable of being ascertained by a certain measure or standard afforded by the contract itself or it may be excontractu for unliquidated damages or for wrongs independent of contract.
In the case at bar the cause of action shows a fixed, definite and ascertained indebtedness from the defendant to the plaintiff, and under the authorities this was a sufficient basis to support the attachment suit. Downes v. Baltimore City,
As to the sixth objection we need only say that section 45 of Article 9 of the Code provides, that the plaintiff may have more than one attachment or writ of attachment to be laid in the hands of different persons or levied upon other property, provided that but one satisfaction of the debt or demand shall be made.
We discover nothing in this objection that would defeat the plaintiff's right of action. Brunsman v. Crook,
For the reasons stated we are of opinion that the motion to quash the attachment in this case was properly overruled. The order will therefore be affirmed and the cause will be remanded that a trial may be had.
Order affirmed and cause remanded for further proceedings,with costs. *Page 166