Allen v. Wheeler
This text of 7 N.W. 111 (Allen v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Section 3055 of the Code provides that an officer who levies an execution ou personal property shall be protected from all liability to third persons unless written notice be given to him of the claim of such third person to the property. We have several times held that under the provisions of this statute an action cannot be maintained against an officer holding property under an execution, without the [630]*630required written notice having been given, and that it is necessary to allege the giving of such notice in the petition. Kaster v. Pease, 42 Iowa, 488; Finch v. Hollinger, 43 Id., 598; Peterson v. Espeset, 48 Id., 262; Gray v. Parker, 49 Id., 624.
In Wadsworth v. Walliker, 45 Iowa, 395, it was held that •section 3055 related exclusively to the levy of an execution, and has no application to a levy by attachment. Counsel for appellant insists that, as the property in controversy was originally seized and levied upon by virtue of writs of attachment, the statute has no application. But this action is not brought for the mere seizure of the property, and its detention for the few days intervening between the service of the writ of attachment and the issuance and levy of the executions upon the judgments. The plaintiff seeks to recover the value of the property, and damages for its alleged malicious seizure and wrongful conversion. The writs of attachment had served their purpose, and when the constable received the executions he held the property by virtue thereof, and upon them he sold it and appropriated the proceeds to the payment of the judgments. We think he held the property under the levy of the executions within the meaning of said section 3055 of the Code. We are the more inclined to so hold in this case because of the peculiar form of the judgment entries and executions. The judgment entries do not contain any order for the sale of the attached property, and although the executions are said to be special they describe no property, and the returns thereon recite actual levies upon the property without reference to it having been before seized by attachment, and it is, therefore, doubtful whether the attachments were not abandoned.
It is urged that, as the jury had been allowed to separate after finding a verdict, it was error after setting the verdict aside to instruct them to find for the defendants. In general, the proposition contended for is correct. But in this case, in the absence of proof of the service of the notice, and in view of the fact that the evidence showed that no notice was served, and the plaintiff made no claim that such service was made, there was no evidence tending in the remotest degree to support a verdict against the defendants. The court might have properly directed the jury in the first instance to find a verdict for the defendants, or it might have taken the case from the jury and rendered a judgment for the defendants. This is the common practice where there is no evidence tending to prove the cause of action. In Wyllis v. Haun, 47 Iowa, 614, the court set aside a verdict of a jury, and upon the facts introduced in evidence upon the trial rendered a judgment against the plaintiff for- costs. The case was affirmed in this court, upon the ground that, upon the undis[632]*632puted facts, the plaintiff as a question of law could not recover. If, as we hold, the court might have properly taken this case from the jury and rendered a judgment for the defendants, the plaintiff is in no way prejudiced by the fact that the jury was directed to iind the lost verdict. We think the judgment of the Circuit Court must be
Affirmed.
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7 N.W. 111, 54 Iowa 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-wheeler-iowa-1880.