Divoll v. Nichols

Munson, J.

The question presented by the demurrer is whether a capias and a trustee summons can be combined in the same process. This question was decided adversely to the plaintiffs’ claim in Cleft v. Hosford, 12 Vt. 296; but counsel insist that that decision should not now be regarded as controlling because of the changes since made in the statute.

Under the earlier statutes the trustee process was an independent writ, available only in the case of concealed or absconding debtors, and seeking collection solely through the debtor’s effects in the hands of the trustee. But by No. 12, Acts of 1835, it was provided that this process might issue also as a writ of attachment against the property of the debtor; and by the revision of 1839 the process was made available in all actions founded on contract.

The act of 1835 was the law in force when the writ in Cleft v. Hosford was issued. That act converted the trustee process into an incidental proceeding in a suit brought to enforce collection directly from the debtor. But the right to take the body of the debtor upon the writ thus authorized was plainly excluded, and the opinion in Cleft v. Hosford places the decision upon the ground that the statute authorized an attachment of the debtor’s property in possession in connection with the trustee process, but not the taking of his body.

The law of 1839 was, as regards the right of attachment, the same in effect as that of 1835. The writ was to issue like other original writs in civil causes, and was to authorize *539the attachment of the debtor’s estate in his own hands as well as that in the hands of his trustee. In the compilation of 1850, the provision specifying what the writ should authorize, was omitted, and the terms were left general, to the effect that all actions founded on contract might be commenced by trustee process, and that every resident of the state having any effects of the principal debtor in his hands might be summoned as trustee; which provision is in substance the present law.

We have traced the changes of the law upon this subject, and noted the relation of Cleft v. Hosford to these changes, to see if there is any ground for the plaintiffs’ claim that as the law now stands, a .creditor should be held entitled to summon the debtor’s trustee in a writ issued against his body, and we discover no ground upon which the claim can be sustained. The comprehensive terms of the present law cannot be held to give that right, without violating all rules applicable to the construction of revisions, and attributingto the legislature an intention entirely inconsistent with its general policy. It was remarked in Cleft v. Hosford that a man may be attached by his body or property, but not by both on the same process, and that the act of 1835, in restricting the right of attachment to the debtor’s property, had preserved the universal distinction. It is not likely that the legislature intended, by its subsequent condensations of the law, to wipe out that distinction as to any part of the debtor’s estate. The creditor must still choose between the property and the body.

Judgment affirmed and catise remanded.