Bradley v. Miller
This text of 69 N.W. 426 (Bradley v. Miller) 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
The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of certain personal property, which she claims the defendant sheriff, by direction of his co-defendant, wilfully, unlawfully, and maliciously, seized, under a writ of attachment, issued against one W. Bradley, and which they still retain, and have converted to their own use; that she gave notice to Miller of her ownership of the property, as by statute required, before bringing suit; but that he refused to release the same; and she asks actual and exemplary damages. To the petition is attached a copy of the notice which plaintiff claims she served upon the sheriff. This notice merely recites that plaintiff is the owner of the property levied upon; that defendants were notified before the levy that plaintiff owned the property; and that Wallace knew all about the ownership before the levy was made. To this petition defendants filed two demurrers. The first one was withdrawn by permission of the court before the second was filed, and the ruling of the court was upon the second demurrer. . The grounds of this demurrer are, that the notice served upon the sheriff is not sufficient, under the statute, and for that reason defendants are not liable for converting the property. This demurrer was sustained, and the appeal involves the correctness of the ruling.
[171]*171
It is elementary doctrine that the levy of an attachment upon the property of a stranger to the writ is a trespass on the rights of the owner, who may maintain either trover, trespass, or replevin, not only against the officer serving the writ, but also against the plaintiff in the suit, if it appears that the plaintiff either directed the act, or afterwards ratified it. And, [172]*172if trover be brought, no demand on, or notice to the officer need be proved, in the absence of a statute requiring it. Drake, Attachm. section 196; Shinn, Attachm. section 362. The statute suspends the right of action against the officer until the notice therein provided for has been given. It does not undertake to give the attaching plaintiff protection, nor is the giving of notice a condition precedent to a right of action against him. His liability stands as it was at common law, and if he direct the seizure of a stranger’s property under a writ of attachment, and afterwards convert the property to his own use, he is liable. The notice is for the protection of the officer, who is bound to levy upon any property which the plaintiff directs him to seize, and the primary object of the statute is to compel the officer to make the levy, and protect him from liability for so doing. Cheadle v. Guittar, 68 Iowa, 680 (28 N. W. Rep. 14). The plaintiff in attachment acts at his peril, and there is no statute relieving him from his common law liability. The question presented does not seem to have been considered in any prior case in this court. It was indirectly involved in the case of Peterson v. Foli, 67 Iowa, 402 (25 N. W. Rep. 677). We there held that the plaintiff in an attachment suit was liable in conversion for the seizure and sale of the property of a stranger, and the statement of the case indicates that no notice was given the sheriff of the plaintiff’s ownership. It must be borne in mind that this is an action for conversion, and not an attempt to recover the specific property levied upon. What the rule should be if it were ah action of replevin, we will not attempt to decide. The cases of Atwood v. Brown, 72 Iowa, 723 (32 N. W. Rep. 108), and Craig v. Fowler, 59 Iowa, 200 (13 N. W. Rep. 116), lend some support to our conclusions. The demurrer was a joint one, and should have been overruled.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
69 N.W. 426, 100 Iowa 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-miller-iowa-1896.