Bank of Lind v. Coss

145 P. 207, 83 Wash. 151, 1915 Wash. LEXIS 676
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1915
DocketNo. 11895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 P. 207 (Bank of Lind v. Coss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Lind v. Coss, 145 P. 207, 83 Wash. 151, 1915 Wash. LEXIS 676 (Wash. 1915).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The plaintiff, Bank of Lind, seeks recovery of damages from the defendant A. J. Coss, sheriff of Adams county, and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, the surety upon his official bond, which damages it claims resulted from the unlawful release of personal property which had been seized and was being held by the defendant Coss under a writ of attachment, issued out of the superior court for Adams county at the instance and for the benefit of the plaintiff. Judgment of dismissal having been rendered in favor of the defendants, upon sustaining their demurrer to the complaint and the plaintiff’s election to stand upon its complaint and not plead further, it has appealed to this court.

The controlling facts may be summarized from the complaint as follows: In October, 1911, appellant commenced [152]*152an action in the superior court for Adams county to recover money owing to it by G. H. and L. O. Thomas, and caused a writ of attachment to be issued therein for the seizure and holding of property of the Thomases pending the action. Seizure of property under the writ was accordingly made by respondent Coss as sheriff of Adams county. Thereafter, on November 10, 1911, the Thomases appeared in the action and moved for dissolution of the attachment, which motion came on for hearing on November 22, 1911, when, the matter being submitted to the court for decision, it was by the court taken under advisement, and as alleged in the complaint, “with the understanding that the plaintiff or its counsel, whose office and place of practicing was in Spokane, Washington, a distance of about one hundred miles from the place of the sitting of said court, were to be advised immediately upon the court’s decision in the matter, and that a sufficient time was to be given the plaintiff or its counsel, in event the court granted said motion, to take its appeal and file a supersedeas bond therein.” Thereafter, on November 27, 1911, the court granted the motion, dissolved the attachment, and entered the order accordingly, and immediately thereafter respondent Coss, who was holding the property as sheriff under the attachment, released and surrendered possession of the property. Appellant had no actual notice of the rendering of the court’s decision dissolving the attachment, or of the release of the property by respondent Coss, until about a week later. Whatever the understanding may have been as to appellant being notified upon the rendition of the court’s decision on the question of dissolution of the attachment, looking to giving it an opportunity for protecting its interest by appeal and supersedeas, we are unable to gather from the complaint any facts showing that respondent Coss was a party to such understanding, or that there was any duty imposed upon him by virtue of such an understanding, whatever his duty may have been under the law aside from such understanding.

[153]*153Soon thereafter, appellant gave notice of, and perfected, its appeal to this court from the decision of the superior court dissolving the attachment, and also filed a supersedeas bond such as was sufficient to supersede that decision, in so far as the same could be superseded in view of the prior surrender of the property by respondent Coss. There is no allegation of the complaint pointing to any effort or request on the part of appellant looking to a retaking of the property by respondent Coss after its release by him in pursuance of the dissolution of the attachment by the superior court and the appeal therefrom. Thereafter judgment was rendered in the superior court upon the merits of the action in favor of appellant and against the Thomases for the amount of the debt sued upon. Thereafter, on August 16, 1912, this court reversed the decision of the superior court dissolving the attachment. Bank of Lind v. Thomas, 69 Wash. 700, 125 Pac. 776. Thereafter execution was duly issued looking to the collection of the judgment rendered against the Thomases, which execution was returned unsatisfied because no property of the Thomases could be found applicable to the satisfaction of the judgment. This1, it is alleged, resulted from the unlawful failure of respondent Coss to hold the attached property after the dissolution of the attachment until appeal and supersedeas was perfected by appellant so as to preserve the attachment.

Was respondent Coss, as sheriff, justified by the order dissolving the attachment in immediately surrendering possession of the attached property? In view of the fact that there was no process or order of the court of any nature then in existence authorizing the holding of the property, we are constrained to hold that he was not only authorized by that order to surrender the property, but that he was bound so to do upon demand from its owner. In Anderson v. Land, 5 Wash. 493, 32 Pac. 107, 34 Am. St. 875, Judge Dunbar, speaking for the court touching the termination of the lien of an attachment by its dissolution, a purchaser of the [154]*154attached property from its owner pending the attachment claiming his title was perfected upon the dissolution of the attachment, as against a subsequent attachment, though the property remained in the hands of the sheriff during the interim between the dissolution of the first and the levy under the second attachment, said:

“The dissolution of the attachment on the 16th day of December ended the lien, and the owner of the property had a right to make any disposition of it he saw fit, no matter whether the property had actually been turned over to him by the officer or not. He could sell the property during the time the writ was in effect in such case, and the purchaser’s title would only be subject to .the right of the attaching creditor under the writ, and when the attachment was dissolved there would be an end to any such right, and the purchaser’s title would be complete.”

It seems to us difficult to escape the controlling force of that decision in respondents’ favor here. In Ryan Drug Co. v. Peacock, 40 Minn. 470, 42 N. W. 298, dealing with a situation almost exactly like that here involved, Chief Justice Gillfillan, speaking for the court, there said:

“As to what is the duty of the sheriff in respect to the attached property upon the dissolution of the attachment, Drake, Attachm. § 426, states the general rule that ‘the special property of the officer in the attached effects is at an end, and he is bound to restore them to the defendant, if he is still the owner of them, or, if not, to the owner.’ This is certainly the logical rule, for, the writ being his only authority for keeping the property from the owner, such authority is gone when the writ is dissolved. It is true that under our practice the plaintiff may, by appealing from the order dissolving the writ and giving the bond for a stay, suspend the operation of the order, and that such suspension will relate back to the date of the order, so that, if the officer still has the property, his right to hold it is restored; and it may also be, as between the parties to the writ, that, if between the date of the order and the appeal with a stay the sheriff has returned the property to the defendant, the appeal and stay reinstate the lien so that the plaintiff may require the [155]*155sheriff to retake the property. Neither of these, however, is this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 P. 207, 83 Wash. 151, 1915 Wash. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-lind-v-coss-wash-1915.