Arbie v. Jones

82 Ark. 414
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 25, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 82 Ark. 414 (Arbie v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arbie v. Jones, 82 Ark. 414 (Ark. 1907).

Opinion

McCulloch, J.

The plaintiffs, E. W. Albie and C. M. Cook, the beneficiary and trustee, respectively, in a trust deed executed by the Erwin & Wood Company conveying a lot of lumber .as .security for a debt to Albie in the sum of $9,500, instituted this action against the defendants, T. T. Jones,- constable, and B. W. Reeves and Berry Murphy, the sureties on his official bond, to recover the value of said lumber which is alleged to have been wrongfully seized and sold by said officer under writs of attachment against the property of Erwin & Wood Company.

The defendants pleaded in justification that the property was seized by the constable as the property of Erwin & Wood Company under orders of general attachment regularly issued by a justice of the peace in certain causes instituted before him against Erwin & Wood Company by its creditors, and that the property was sold by the officer .pursuant to judgments and orders of sale rendered by the justice of the peace in said causes. The defendants in their answer denied that plaintiffs were the owners or in possession of the lumber when the same was seized under the writs of attachment; and they also alleged that the plaintiffs filed in said action before -the justice of the peace their inter-pleas claiming said lumber, and on the trial thereof their claim to the lumber was adjudged against them in each action, and that the court adjudged the lumber to be the property of Erwin & Wood Company, sustained the attachments, and ordered the lumber sold.

The case was tried below before a jury, verdict was returned in favor of the defendants] judgment was .entered accordingly, and the plaintiffs appealed.

The facts established by undisputed evidence are as follows: On February 28, 1896, and for some time prior thereto, the Erwin & Wood Company, a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the State of Iowa, was doing a sawmill business at Norphlat, Union County, Arkansas. 'Being indebted to E. W. Albie on that date in the sum of $9500, the company .executed to him its two promissory notes for $4500 and $5000, due, respectively, May 1, 1896, and April 1, 1896. To secure same, the company further executed a mortgage or deed of trust conveying to one Graham, as trustee, certain property, amongst which was the lumber the value whereof is in controversy here. The deed of trust is in the usual form, and gives the trustee power to take immediate possession of the property on default, and was filed for record March 10, 1896. Afterwards, on default, Graham, the trustee in said deed of trust, took possession of the property conveyed therein. Afterwards, Graham refusing to act further as trust'ee, C. M. Cook was appointed in his stead, and as such trustee took possession of said property, among which was a large lot of lumber at Norphlet.

While said lumber was thus in the hands of Cook, as trustee, Wolf & Brother and >a number of other creditors of the Erwin & Wood Company brought separate suits before a justice of the peace of El Dorado Township, Union County. Writs of attachment were issued in each of these suits and placed in the hands of defendant Jones as constable, and by him levied upon the lumber described in the deed of trust and in the hands of Cook as trustee thereunder.

In the suit of Wolf & Brother, Albie, as beneficiary in the deed of trust, and Cook, as trustee, filed an interplea, claiming the lumber, levied on by the constable, under the deed of trust’ above mentioned.

The interpleas was tried on July 10, 1896, and judgment rendered against the interveners. Erwin & Wood Company did not appear in the suit, and judgment for the debt was rendered against them on the same day, the attachment sustained, and the lumber attached was ordered sold by the constable. Interveners, on the day of the judgment, filed their affidavit for appeal, obtained transcript, and filed same in circuit court.

In August, 1896, the justice of the peace issued to the constable orders of sale in regular form in all of the cases, and pursuant to such orders the constable sold all of the.lumber levied upon under the several writs of attachment.

The present actions were instituted to recover the value of lumber seized and sold in the cases other than that of Wolf & Bro. v. Erwin & Wood Company the lumber levied on and sold in that case is not included in this controversy. The two actions instituted by appellants were consolidated and tried together by consent of parties, the trial resulting in a verdict and judgment for the defendants as already stated.

The defendants introduced in evidence the docket of the justice of the peace showing judgments in each of the cases against Erwin & Wood Company in the same regular form as in the Wolf & Bro. case, that is to say, that Albie and Cook filed interpleas for the lumber, that upon trial thereof the issues were adjudged against them, and that judgments in due form were rendered in favor of the several plaintiffs therein against Erwin & Wood Company, the attachment sustained, and the lumber ordered sold, and that the interveners prayed an appeal to the circuit court.

The plaintiffs disputed the correctness of the record made by the justice of the peace and introduced proof of their contention. They introduced several witnesses, among them one of the attorneys who represented the plaintiffs throughout' the litigation, who testified that the record of the justice was false, that Albie and Wood had never filed an intervention in any of the cases pending before the justice except in the Wolf & Bro. case, and that their claim to the lumber in controversy had never in any manner been adjudicated in the cases before the justice of the peace.

Mr. Smead, the attorney who testified in the case, said that he represented Albie and Cook in the case of Wolf & Bro. v. Erwin & Wood Company, and filed the intervention for Albie and Cook in that case, and that no intervention was filed in the other cases. He stated that, after the adverse decision of the justice upon the intervention in the Wolf case, he filed an affidavit for appeal, and that thereupon, by agreement between him and the attorneys for the plaintiffs- in the other cases, those cases against Erwin & Wood Company were continued to wait the disposition of the Wolf case, and that an entry was made by the justice on his docket in each of the cases as follows: “The above case was continued without prejudice to wait the decision of the case of Wolf Bros, against Erwin & Wood Company in the Union Circuit Court.” These entries were- erased, as the evidence shows, after appellants and their attorneys had left the place where the justice was holding court and after tjie justice had 'adjourned his court; and the judgments were afterwards spread upon the docket by the justice without the knowledge of appellants or their attorneys, and they received no information thereof before the constable sold the lumber. The attorney testified that, but for said agreement and the said entries showing continuance of the cases, he would have filed interventions for Albie and Cook in each of the cases.

Now, if the testimony of this and the other witnesses is true, the alleged judgments as recorded on the docket of the justice are void. It is an elementary rule that a person who is not party or privy to proceedings in court is not Ifound by its adjudication.

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82 Ark. 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arbie-v-jones-ark-1907.