Branch Bank v. Broughton

15 Ala. 127
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 15 Ala. 127 (Branch Bank v. Broughton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branch Bank v. Broughton, 15 Ala. 127 (Ala. 1848).

Opinion

CHILTON, J.

We think there can be but little doubt as to the correctness of the decision of the court below upon the facts presented. The statute declares “ that the lien created by the delivery of an execution from a court of record to the sheriff, shall continue to bind the property of the defendant as between different judgment creditors in the courts of record in this State, in the following manner, viz: If a term shall elapse after the return of the first execution, before an alias shall be sued out and delivered to the sheriff, the lien created by the delivery of the first execution shall be canceled, and of no avail; but if a term shall not have elapsed, and the alias shall be delivered to the sheriff before the sale of the property under a junior execution in favor of another creditor, the lien shall continue, notwithstanding such alias may not have been delivered until after such junior execution ; but if such alias shall not be delivered until after the sale under such junior execution, the lien of the latter will prevail.” Clay’s Dig, 209, § 43. Now, the property of the goods of the defendant being bound only from the time the writ of execution is delivered to the sheriff, (Clay’s Dig, 208, & 41,) and there having been the lapse of a term between the issuance of the first execution of the bank, which was the 30th September, 1846, and the issuance of the second, the 27th September, 1847; and the executions, of Broughton Duprey having been delivered to the sheriff in April, 1847, it would seem to follow, from the language of the statute, that the lien of the latter executions is superior to that of the bank. McBroom & Turner v. Rives, 1 Stew. Rep. 72; Carey v. [130]*130Gregg, 3 Stew. Rep. 433; Mills v. Williams, 2 S. & P. 390; Collingsworth v. Horn, 4 Stew. & Porter, 237.

. Let us proceed to inquire whether the levy, and peculiar situation of the property, may, notwithstanding this chasm, preserve the lien. It appears that after the sheriff had levied upon the slave, the proceeds of the sale of which are now in controversy, and had indorsed the said levy upon the first bank execution, he was instructed by the bank to stay further proceedings under said fi. fa. This instruction was given a short time previous to the return day; and the reason for giving such instruction is stated in the record to be, that a claim had been interposed, and bond given upon a levy made under another fi. fa. of the bank on. the same slave. It is insisted by the attorney for the bank, that this levy gave a prior right of satisfaction which was not affected by the instructions, inasmuch as the right to the slave levied upon was then being tried under a levy made upon said slave, under another execution upon a different judgment in favor of the bank.

■ It has been several times decided by this court, that property levied upon, and for which a claim has been interposed under the statute, and a bond given to try the right, pending said claim, is in the custody of the law, and not subject to be levied upon by other executions not having a prior lien. McRea & Augustin v. McLean, 3 Porter’s Rep. 138; Pond v. Griffin, 1 Ala. Rep. 678; Rives & Owen v. Wilborne, 6 Ala. Rep. 45, 48. But it does not follow, that because the property is considered in the custody of the law, and consequently not liable to seizure upon a levy, that the lien of executions which would be entitled to the surplus which may remain after satisfying the execution under which it was condemned, is lost or destroyed. The lien in such case, if executions are regularly kept up, is suspended, not lost. Langdon v. Brumby, 7 Ala. Rep. 52. The property of the defendant in the execution is not' the less his, because a false or unfounded claim has been asserted to it by a third party. Upon a sale of it by the sheriff, the proceeds will be applied to the satisfaction of the oldest liens, and the fi. fa. under which it is condemned, may be postponed to an older fi. fa., regularly kept up .from term to term. 7 Ala. 52, supra. We think it [131]*131would be an erroneous construction of the statutes which authorize the replevy of property under attachments, or the trial of the right thereto, to hold, that proceedings under them should have the effect to interfere with the liens of creditors. Such was not the intention of the framers of these laws, and we can readily perceive how the most mischievous consequences would result from such construction. The right to levy and sell is the means which the law affords for rendering the lien effectual, and the suspension of this right by the act of a third party, over which the creditor had no control, ought not — cannot destroy his lien.

Has the execution of the bank lost its priority from the order given by the plaintiff to stay all further proceedings under the execution? This question was so elaborately investigated in the case of Wood v. Garey, 5 Ala. Rep. 43, that it would be useless again to review the authorities there collated and commented upon. In that case, a majority of the court hold, that to render an execution dormant, or in other words fraudulent, there must be some act of the plaintiff inconsistent with the pursuit of the defendant by execution to obtain satisfaction of the judgment. That the mere delay of the plaintiff in not compelling the sheriff to levy and sell, will not raise the presumption of fraud; but to produce this result, there must be instructions from the plaintiff to delay the seizure, or to let the executions sleep in the sheriff’s hands. In the case from which I have quoted, the party whose execution was sought to be postponed had ordered it to be returned a few days before the return day, and the court held this did not work a forfeiture of the lien, and could not be constructively fraudulent. In this case, the plaintiff ordered the sheriff to stop proceedings under his execution, and did not issue another fi. fa. until near a year afterwards.

If the instruction of the plaintiff to stop further proceedings, after the sheriff had made a levy, is in law constructively fraudulent as against junioi judgment creditors, the motive which prompted the instruction is unimportant as affecting the result.. If the act in judgment of law be per se fraudulent, the motive, however innocent or benevolent, is not the subject of inquiry. Now, in the case above referred to, it is stated as the clear result of the adjudged cases, that [132]*132if the creditor place his execution in the sheriff’s hands, with instructions not to levy; or after a levy, to hold it up and not to sell, it will be constructively fraudulent against junior judgment creditors, who will thereby obtain the superior lien.

The case to which we are referred by the counsel for the bank, of Power v. Van Buren, 7 Cow. 560, (if it can be considered as correctly settling the law as to the motive for delay,) is not analagous to the case at bar. In that case, the sheriff levied upon a quantity of hides in the vats undergoing the process of tanning, which could not be taken up and sold without sacrificing most of the labor already bestowed upon them, with the bark used in tanning, and the sale could not have been made with advantage until warm weather in the spring. Under such circumstances, the sheriff was instructed that there need not be a sale until about the first of May, the levy having been made in the previous autumn. The court approved the reason given for delaying the sale, and say the Ji. fa. did not thereby become dormant.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ala. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-bank-v-broughton-ala-1848.