Andrews v. Smithson

136 P.2d 531, 114 Mont. 360, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 24
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1943
DocketNo. 8328.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 P.2d 531 (Andrews v. Smithson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Smithson, 136 P.2d 531, 114 Mont. 360, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 24 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

*362 MR. JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action to quiet title to 360 acres of land in Cascade county. The complaint is in the usual form except the clause suggested in section 9480, Revised Codes, relative to unknown parties, is not employed. Demand is made for possession of the premises, damages for use of the lands for a period of years in the sum of $7,000, and adjudication of title in favor of the plaintiffs. The answer is a general denial followed by two affirmative defenses; the first is a recital ■ of the facts upon which the defendant Smithson grounds her title, and the second is a recital of facts upon which laches and estoppel are pleaded and predicated. The reply is a general denial of the affirmative matter alleged in the answer. The defendant demands judgment quieting her title and costs of suit. By stipulation the defendant Mehmke, being merely a tenant on the lands, was dismissed as a defendant in so far as title to the lands was concerned, but required to account for the landlord’s share of the crop.

The facts are these: In November, 1929, A. B. Andrews, husband of one of the plaintiffs, Jessie K. Andrews, and father of the other plaintiffs, was the owner of the lands involved in this action. November 6, 1929, the Advance-Rumely Thresher Company commenced an action against Andrews in the district court in and for Yellowstone county to recover on a promissory note. Summons was issued and personally served, with a copy of the complaint, on Andrews in his home county of Wheatland, by the sheriff of that county, and a writ of attachment was issued and levied on the lands by the sheriff of Cascade county November 7, 1929; November 14, 1930, judgment was made and entered in Yellowstone county in favor of the Thresher Company for the amount of the note and interest, attorney’s fees and costs; February 28, 1931, Andrews died in Wheatland county, and Jessie K. Andrews, his wife, was appointed administratrix of his estate by the district court of Wheatland county; January 18, 1932, execution was issued out of the district court of Yellowstone county directed to the sheriff *363 of Cascade county with instructions that he proceed to advertise and sell the land previously attached by him at the commencement of the action. Pursuant to such instructions the sheriff of Cascade county sold the lands on February 11, 1932, to Glenn Smithson, assignee of the judgment creditor, and issued a duplicate certificate of sale to Smithson, filed the original certificate of sale in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Cascade county, and made his return to the district court of Yellowstone county. No redemption was made from the execution sale, and on February 15, 1933, the sheriff made and delivered a sheriff’s deed of the lands to Glenn Smithson, which deed was recorded in Cascade county February 28, 1933. Glenn Smithson died at Long Beach, California, in October, 1937, and shortly before his death he delivered a deed to the lands to his wife, the defendant. July 6, 1933, after having received the sheriff’s deed to the lands, Smithson paid delinquent taxes thereon for the years 1931 and 1932 in the sum of $567.88, and he and his wife thereafter paid all the taxes levied on the lands during their respective periods of possession in annual payments, running from $181.73 to $215.61, down to and including the year 1939, the year in which this action was commenced. The cause was tried to the court sitting without a jury. Findings of the trial court were in accord with the contentions of the defendant in all material particulars. Judgment was made and entered in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiffs appealed.

We deem it unnecessary to consider the numerous assign- ments of error in detail. The principal attack upon the defendant’s title is on the ground that the sheriff’s sale under execution is void for the reason that a transcript of the docket of the judgment obtained in Yellowstone county was not filed in the office of the clerk of court of Cascade county prior to issuance of the writ of execution. Filing a transcript of the-judgment obtained in Yellowstone county in the office of the-clerk of the court in Cascade county under the circumstances: would have accomplished nothing more than had been accomplished by the levy of the attachment made by the sheriff of *364 Cascade county when the action was commenced. Levy of the attachment on commencement of the action, and filing a transcript of the judgment in a county other than that in which the judgment was obtained and entered accomplish the same thing — either process merely holds the property intact and free from attachment or execution by other creditors or transfer by the debtor until execution can issue and the property under lien be sold. Whether the judgment creditor has acquired a lien by attachment or by filing a transcript of his judgment obtained in another county than that where the property is located, is not vitally material. In either case the judgment creditor cannot obtain the fruits of his judgment until the property is advertised and sold according to law.

Such, in effect, is the rule laid down in Holter Hardware Co. v. Ontario Min. Co., 24 Mont. 184, 61 Pac. 3, 6, an action on all fours with the case at bar. In that case suit was commenced in Lewis and Clark county, and attachment was levied on property in Deer Lodge county and sold under execution without any transcript of the judgment obtained in Lewis and Clark county having been filed in Deer Lodge county. This court there said: ‘ ‘ The levy of the writ of attachment created the lien. The property was thereby seized and held, and there was no necessity for filing a transcript of the judgment. * * * An attachment having been levied within the life of the writ, a lien is created, which may be enforced by execution sale without further levy.” (See, also, Britannia Min. Co. v. United States F. & G. Co., 43 Mont. 93, 115 Pac. 46, and cases cited; In re Stevenson’s Estate, 87 Mont. 486, 289 Pac. 566.)

In the case of Britannia Min. Co. v. United States F. & G. Co., supra, it was said: ‘ ‘ The property was already in the custody of the law and beyond the control of the judgment debtor, so far as the rights of the creditor were concerned. The execution was the mere instrumentality through which the creditor might reap the fruit of a seizure which had already been made by virtue of the judgment lien. In such a case the Code contemplates that the sheriff shall give the required notice and sell. *365 Nothing more is required, and the references to a levy, in section 6827 and elsewhere, can apply only to property of a character different from that we are now considering. To make a formal levy in a ease of this kind would be an idle ceremony, without significance, legal or otherwise.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P.2d 531, 114 Mont. 360, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-smithson-mont-1943.