Blatchford v. Conover

40 N.J. Eq. 205
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 N.J. Eq. 205 (Blatchford v. Conover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blatchford v. Conover, 40 N.J. Eq. 205 (N.J. 1885).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

Joseph Lloyd, in 1872, was seized of a tract of land situate in the county of Monmouth. On the 10th of April, 1872, Asher [209]*209Holmes, as a creditor of Lloyd, sued out of the circuit court of said county a writ of attachment against the estate of Lloyd as a non-resident debtor. This writ was duly executed by attaching the said land as Lloyd’s property.

Lloyd, by a deed executed May 23d, 1872, and recorded May 28th, 1872, conveyed the premises to Eichard M. Blatehford to secure the repayment of money loaned by him to Lloyd.

John E. ’V'anderveer, Obadiah Holmes, John S. Applegate, Marsh & Co., and others, were, by rules of court, admitted as applying creditors under the attachment. An auditor was appointed, judgment by default in the attachment suit on the auditor’s report was entered, and an order for a sale by the auditor of the lands attached was made in the attachment suit.

On the 2.6th of March, 1873, on the application of Lloyd, the judgment by default was opened and his appearance entered at the suit of the plaintiff in attachment and each of the applying creditors, pursuant to the thirty-eighth section of the attachment act, without any bond being given. Thereupon the attachment proceedings were, by rule of court, set aside, saving all liens created by the statute.

Declarations were filed in said suits, to which the defendant filed pleas, and at January term, 1874, the suits were brought to trial, and judgments were obtained by ’V’anderveer, Applegate, Obadiah Holmes and Marsh & Co. The plaintiff in the attachment did not obtain any judgment. Vanderveer’s judgment was entered January 29th, 1874, and, on the 30th of January, 1874, the judgments of Applegit, Obadiah Holmes and Marsh & Co. were entered. Upon these several judgments executions duly recorded were issued, directed to the sheriff of the county of Monmouth, and executed by him by a levy upon the same premises. The sheriff subsequently made sale of the premises under and by virtue of the said executions, and Conover became the purchaser thereof, and took a sheriff’s deed therefor bearing date December 9th, 1874.

Conover, befing in possession, filed this bill against the executors and devisees of Blatehford, to have his title under the sheriff’s deed declared superior to Blatchford’s title under the [210]*210deed from Lloyd. He claims that his title has relation to the time when the writ of attachment was issued.

The attachment act gives the writ of attachment a lien on the lands of the defendant from the time it was issued, and makes yoid all convejumces by him thereafter, and declares that a deed of conveyance therefor by the auditor shall convey to the purchaser the estate the defendant had at the time the writ became a lien. Rev. 45 § 18; Id. 51 § 53. The lien so created is for the benefit of the plaintiff in the attachment suit, and all creditors who may become applying creditors. Oummins v. Blair, 3 Harr. 151. On the other hand, the act concerning judgments provides that no judgment shall affect or bind lands but from the time of the actual entry thereof on the minutes or records of the court. Rev. 530 § 3.

Blatchford’s deed is subsequent to the issuing of the writ of attachment, and prior to the entry of the judgments upon which the executions were issued under which the sheriff made sale. The question presented is whether Conover’s title taken under the sheriff’s sale will have relation to the time when the writ of attachment was issued, and have the same priority it would have had if taken under a sale by the auditor in the attachment proceedings.

The proceeding for the collection of debts by attachment is altogether statutory, and derives its efficacy wholly from the terms and provisions of the statute. “ It has,” as was said by Chief-Justice Beasley, “no other or greater effect than such as has been, either in express terms or by reasonable intendment, given to it by the legislative will.” Miller v. Dungan, 7 Vr. 21. “Nothing,” says Mr. Drake, “seems more distinctly to characterize the whole system of remedy by attachment than that it is a special remedy at law, belonging exclusively to a court of law, and to be resorted to and pursued in conformity with the terms of the law conferring it.” Brahe on Attachment § 4 a.

The attachment act in force in this state possesses peculiar features which distinguish proceedings under it from proceedings under attachment acts of sister states. In most of the other states the writ is sued out by a creditor for his benefit alone, and [211]*211no other creditor being allowed to participate in the fruits of the attachment, the property attached is sold under process of execution issued upon the judgment of the plaintiff in the attachment. The passage cited from Drake on Attachment, in which the author says that the lien of the attachment becomes merged in the plaintiff’s judgment, and its priority is maintained and enforced by the judgment, is taken from the decision of a court upon a statute under which the attachment is for the benefit only of the creditor who sues out the writ, and his judgment and the execution thereon are the means provided for enforcing the lien obtained by the writ. Drake on Attachment § 224 a; Bayley v. Ward, 37 Cal. 121. Decisions upon statutes of that character have no application to our statute, under which (except where the writ is sued out of a justice’s court) the proceedings are for the benefit of all the defendant’s creditors, and creditors who come in under the attachment are entitled to share in the property seized under the writ on an equality with the plaintiff at whose suit the writ was issued. With respect to the property attached and the means of enforcing the lien of the writ of attachment, the proceeding provided by the act is in rem. Only one judgment is to be entered in the attachment suit, and that judgment includes the debts found to be due to all the creditors respectively, as well those who come in under the attachment as the plaintiff by whom the writ was sued out; and the sale and conveyance of the property attached, which the statute contemplates as the execution of the lien of the writ, and as the method of transferring a title to the purchaser as of the time the writ was issued, is a sale and conveyance by the auditor, under an order to sell made by the court, in the attachment suit.

In the court below, Conover’s title under the sheriff’s deed seems' to have been given relation as of the time the writ of attachment was issued, ex necessitate, on the theory that a sale could not be made by the auditor where the defendant had appeared to the suits of the plaintiff and the applying creditors. This opinion was based on a literal rendering of the fifty-first section of the act. That section enacts:

[212]*212“That when judgment on the report of the auditor shall be entered against the defendant by default, the auditor may, by virtue of an order of the court for that purpose, make sale and assurance of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements, of the said defendant, which were attached and taken as aforesaid, and upon which the attachment remains a lien.”

The chancellor’s view of this section is that under it the auditor was not empowered to sell the lands attached except where the judgment had been entered by default.

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Wilomay Holding Co. v. Peninsula Land Co.
116 A.2d 484 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1955)
Miller v. Reich
34 A.2d 143 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.J. Eq. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blatchford-v-conover-nj-1885.