Bozeman v. Rose

JUDGE, J.

Section 2503 of tbe Code is as follows: “ Attachments may issue : 1. To enforce tbe collection of a debt, whether it be due or not at tbe time the attachment is taken out. 2. Eor any moneyed demand, the amount of which can be certainly ascertained. 3. To recover damages for a breach of contract, when the damages are not certain or liquidated. 4. When the action sounds in damages merely.”

If the attachment be issued “ to recover damages for a breach of contract, when the damages are not certain or liquidated”, or in an “action sounding in damages merely ”, it must be issued by a circuit judge, or chancellor ; and in every such case, the judge or chancellor, before issuing it, must require the plaintiff, his agent, or attorney, in addition to the affidavit and bond required in other cases, to make affidavit in writing of the special facts and circumstances, so as to enable him to determine the amount for which a levy must be made. — Code, § 2508.. In all other cases, the attachment may be issued without such special affidavit.

In the case before us, a special affidavit was made ; and in the court below, by agreement between the parties, a plea in abatement was considered as filed in due form and substance, to test its sufficiency. The affidavit describes the contract on which the suit is founded, as being in sub*215stance as follows : In June, 1863, tbe plaintiff “ loaned ” to tbe defendants a specified quantity and quality of ginned and packed cotton; in consideration of which, tbe defendants agreed to deliver to tbe plaintiff tbe same quantity and quality of cotton, on tbe first day of January, 1865. It is averred in tbe affidavit, that tbe defendants neglected and refused to deliver tbe cotton; but neither the place of delivery, nor tbe price of tbe cotton, is stated; and these are urged as tbe ground's of objection to tbe affidavit.

Tbe gravaman of the action being an alleged breach of this contract, for which alone tbe attachment was sued out, tbe first question we will consider is this: — "Was it sued out for tbe recovery of a “ moneyed demand, tbe amount of wbicb can be certainly ascertained ”, witbin tbe meaning of tbe Code; or “ to recover damages for a breach of contract, when tbe damages are not certain or liquidated?” If tbe former, no special affidavit was necessary; if tbe latter, then, sueb affidavit was necessary. :

On tbe hypothesis of a breach of tbe contract by defendants, it is contended that tbe plaintiff’s demand, arising therefrom, is not a “moneyed demand”; but if it is, tbe further position is taken, that it- is not a “ moneyed demand, tbe amount of wbicb can be certainly ascertained”, witbin tbe meaning of tbe Code.

When tbe contract is one by wbicb tbe plaintiff is to receive, not money, but tbe transfer of certain property, on a breach of tbe contract, tbe value of tbe property is tbe measure of damages, “ because this is the remuneration fixed by the agreement."- — Sedg. on Dam. 203, 193; McDonald v. Oyer, 21 Penn. 417. “ If tbe consideration is to be paid in money, it must be paid; if by tbe delivery of a thing of ascertained value, that value, if there is a breach, is tbe measure of damages.” — Strutt v. Farlan, 16 M. & W. 249.

Taking tbe affidavit as a full and precise statement of tbe plaintiff’s cause of action, we are invited to tbe consideration of a smpposecl state of pleadings and proof in tbe cause, and to what would be tbe results thereof, to bring us to tbe conclusion that tbe plaintiff’s is not a moneyed demand. We decbne to enter into such an investigation. No question is legitimately presented by tbe record requir*216ing it. If no cause of action exists, or if anj good defense can be made to the action, the proper time to demonstrate it is on the trial of the cause, under appropriate pleadings and proof. The affidavit setting forth the contract, has not the character, nor was it intended to perform the office, of any part of the pleadings in the cause ; nor can we visit upon it the strictness required in pleading. Viewing it only for the purposes of this case, in the attitude the case at present occupies, we hold it to be, prima facie, sufficient to show a “moneyed demand” in favor of the plaintiff; setting forth, as it does, a contract, and substantially averring a breach of that contract, and the law fixing the compensation for the breach in money.

If the demand sued for wras a sum of money due by certain and express agreement, and the quantity was fixed and specific, and it did not depend upon any subsequent valuation to settle it, then it would be a debt, within the meaning of the first sub-division of the Code above quoted. But such is not the character of the plaintiff’s demand; it is for damages for a breach of contract; and the damages resulting from the breach as alleged, are not uncertain, or unliquidated. “ Unliquidated damages are such as rest in opinion only, and must be ascertained by a jury, the verdict being regulated by the peculiar circumstances of each particular case; they are damages which cannot be ascertained by computation or calculation — as, for instance, damages for not using a farm in a workmanlike manner ; for not skillfully amputating a limb; for carelessly upsetting a stage, by which a bone is broken; for the breach of a marriage contract; and other cases of a like character, where the amount to be settled rests in the discretion, judgment, or opinion, of the jury.”. — Sedg. on Dam. 428; Butts v. Collins, 13 Wendell, 139. Damages are unliquidated, when there is no criterion provided by the parties, or by the law, for their ascertainment.. — McCord v. Williams, 2 Ala. 71. They are certain, or liquidated, when the measure of damages is ascertained, or fixed, by the law of the contract, or the law operating upon the contract; or, when the facts upon which the demand is based being established, *217the law is capable of measuring the damages accurately by a pecuniary standard.

The pecuniary standard in the case before us is, the value of the specific quantity and quality of cotton as named in the contract, on the first day of January, 1865. The fact that no place is named in the contract, as set forth in the affidavit, where the cotton was to be delivered, makes no alteration in the effect of the application of the principle announced. It matters not whether the legal construction of the contract is, that the cotton, being a ponderous article, was to have been delivered at the residence of the defendants, as is contended; or that, being a ban, it was to have been returned “ in hind,” to the lender. In either event, the pecuniary standard, by which the damages are to be measured, is the same. And when such a standard is provided, the damages are limited, specified, defined, and therefore certain, as opposed to indefinite ; and, in the meaning of the Code, can be “ certainty ascertained” “ Id cerium est, quod certtm reddi potest.”

This view of the law is fully sustained by the case of Weaver v. Puryear & Williamson, (11 Ala. 941,) in which it was held, that a demand for a breach of warranty of the soundness of a slave was one on which an action might be commenced by attachment, under the statute then in force, as, by the law acting upon the contract, the damages to which the party was entitled, upon a breach of the contract, was a sum capable of ascertainment. The effect of the decision in that case was, that the demand sued for was liquidated damages; and the decision is fully sustained by the authorities cited in the opinion of the court; especially by the case of Fisher v. Consequa, 2 Wash. C. C. 282. See, also, Younge v. Holley, 27 Ala. 203; Gibson v. Marquis, 29 Ala. 668.

It has been contended in argument, that no demand is embraced by the 2d sub-division of section 2503 of the Code, unless its very nature would authorize the suing out of an attachment upon it, as well before, as after its maturity; and that such not being the nature of the plaintiff’s demand in this case, it can not be embraced by that sub-division. This argument must have been *218mad© under a misapprehension of section 2503. By its express terms, there is but one class of cases in -which, an attachment can be issued, before the maturity of the demand; and that is when it is sued out “to enforce the collection of a debt.” In all other cases, a right of action must have accrued, by the terms of the contract, or the nature of the transaction itself, before the right to an attachment to enforce any demand arising therefrom, can exist; and the premises of the argument being incorrect,, the argument itself falls to the ground.

[2.] Our conclusion is, that no special affidavit was necessary in this case. But, if one was necessary, the plea in abatement could not be sustained. In cases requiring it, the special affidavit is made for the single purpose of enabling the judge or chancellor, issuing the attachment, “ to determine the amount for which a levy must bs made.” When it is sufficient for this purpose, (and the judge or chancellor who is to act upon it must determine its sufficiency,) the requirement of the statute is fully satisfied. None of the other safeguards provided by the law, against injury and oppression in the use of the process, are dispensed with; and on the affidavit of the defendant, the amount for which the levy is made may be reduced, and the levy released to the amount of the reduction, at the return term, of the attachment. — Code, § 2508. A statement of the facts and circumstances in the affidavit is required in no prescribed form, but as a predicate for the action of a judge or chancellor in a single matter, and as a step in a remedial proceeding conclusive upon no right of any party; and whether the statement shall be more or less definite and specific, must be regarded as resting in. the discretion of the judge or chancellor, and not a proper subject for revision on appeal'. Such has been the decision of the supreme court of Ohio, in an attachment case, involving a similar question. — Harrison & Wiley v. King, 9 Ohio St. R. 388. See, also, Ex parte Banks, 28 Ala. 28. To abate attachment suits, on pleas for defects in such affidavits, would not be “liberally construing the attachment law, to advance the manifest intent of the law.”— Code, § 2562.

*219A statute of New York requires one, desiring to commence an action of tort, against a non-resident, by a justice’s warrant of attachment, to statefacts and circumstances within his knowledge, showing that his claim arises ex delicto. Under this statute, it has been held in that State, that there was no revisable error where the affidavit stated that the plaintiff verily believed that he had a good cause of action for fraud and deceit in the sale of certain goods. — Pope v. Hart, 35 Barb. 630; U. S. An. Digest, vol. 16, p. 4, § 23.

This case having been brought into this court by appeal, before final judgment in the court below, by consent of the parties, pursuant to an act of the legislature, approved February 23,1866, authorizing such appeals in cases like tho present, (Pamph. Acts, 1865-6, p. 94,) we affirm the ruling of the court below, at the costs of the appellant, and remand the cause for further proceedings.