Brown v. Clarke

45 U.S. 4, 11 L. Ed. 850, 4 How. 4, 1846 U.S. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 12, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 45 U.S. 4 (Brown v. Clarke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Clarke, 45 U.S. 4, 11 L. Ed. 850, 4 How. 4, 1846 U.S. LEXIS 378 (1846).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

By the law of the State of Mississippi, a judgment is a lien upon the personal as well as real property of the defendant, from the time of its rendition (Smith et al. v. Everly. et al., 4 How. 178 ; Commercial Bank of Manchester v. Coroner of Yazoo County, 6 How. 350); and if the first judgment obtained by Brown against Cozárt could be upheld against the objections taken to it, there is no doubt, according to the law of Mississippi, that the instructions, given by the Court belowtó the jury were erroneous.- That judgment was docketed on the ,18th of May, 1840, whereas Clarke’s was not recovered till the 16th of June following.

It is insisted, however, that the seizure ofx the property of the defendant by the sheriff, under the.first judgment, and discharge of it .on the execution and delivery of thé forthcoming bond, operated to extinguish the lien, and. let in that of the junior judgment of Clarke, so as to give it the preference. This raises the principal question discussed in the case..

• By the act of 1827 (Laws of Miss., p. 123, § 2), the sheriff or other officer is required, upon the levy of an execution upon pérsonal property, to take a bond, if tendered, with sufficient security, from the debtor, payable to the creditors, reciting thé service of such execution, and the amount due thereon, in a penalty of double the amount of such execution,, with condition to have the property levied on forthcoming at the dáy of sale ; aad if the owners of such property or the defendant in the execution shall fail to deliver the • same according to the condition of the bond, such sheriff or other officer shall return, the bond so forfeited, with the execution, to the court from which the same issued, on the return day thereof; and every bond so forfeitéd shall have the force and effect of a judgment, and execution shall issue against all the obligors thereon, &c.

Under this statute, it appears to have been uniformly held in the courts of Mississippi, that the bond thus given to the creditor on the seizure of the goods was intended as a substitutéd security for the lien acquired by the judgment and seizure ; and consequently, on its execution and delivery, the goods, by operation of law, are released from all charge, and left in the possession of the debtors as free and unencumbered as before it attached ; and if the property is not delivered, in pursuance of the condition, the remedy is then upon the bond, which on the breach or forfeiture becomes, by *13 operation of tbe statute, a statutory judgment against the defendant and sureties from that time, followed by a new lien upon the real and personal estate of all the obligors. The original judgment is merged and satisfied by the new and more comprehensive statutory judgment upon the bond, and the remedy of the creditors limited to the enforcement of this judgment.

This is, in substance, the view of the statute as expounded by the courts of Mississippi in several cases, and particularly in the case of the Bank of the United States v. Patton ef al. (5 How. 200) in the Court of Appeals, which was argued twice, and very fully considered by the court. (Stewart v. Fuqua, Walk. R. 175 ; Witherspoon v. Spring, 3 How. 60 Archibald et al. v. Anderson, 2 How. 852.; King v. Terry, 6 How. 513 ; Minor v. Lancashire, 4 How. 347.) In the case of the Bank of the United States v. Patton, the court, speaking of what would have been the effect of the forthcoming bond, if the statute had not annexed to it the force of a judgment, say,— As it releases the levy, and restores the property to the debtor, it is tantamount to a satisfaction of the execution, and the creditor would be left to pursue his remedy upon the bond.”

The court then liken it to the replevin bond in Virginia, which had been held to be a substitute for the original judgment, and operated as a satisfaction ; and add,— u It was no doubt in view of this- principle that the framers of our statute saw proper to relieve the creditors from the'delay and expense of a second suit upon the bond, hy giving to it after forfeiture the force of a judgment against all the obligors therein, with a consequent right to have execution on the same; and also to provide, that no security. should be taken on the execution which is sued out upon the new judgment.”

It will be seen, therefore, that the forthcoming bond and statutory judgment consequent upon the forfeiture, in its operation and effect, reversed the original position of these parties in respect to . the priority of lien under their respéctive judgments, and gave to Clarke, the plaintiff below, the preference, his judgment having been docketed the 16th of June, and the new judgment of Brown not taking effect till the 17th of August, the date of the forfeiture 'of the bond. (Minor v. Lancashire.)

. If the case stood upon this footing, it is -very plain that Clarke, the purchaser under the sale of the marshal, acquired the better title- to the property in question, and that the instructions were in conformity to the law of the case.

It is contended, however, that the quashing of the - forthcoming bond, and consequently the new statutory judgment, operated to revive the original one, and to restore the priority of lien, the same as it stood before any of the proceedings on that judgment had intervened.

*14 We do not assent to this view of the effect of the order vacating the new judgment, so far, at least, as respects the liens or rights of third parties which have legally attached in the mean time to the goods of the defendant, discharged from the original judgment by the giving of the forthcoming bond. After that lien was suspended or discharged, the original judgment being, in contemplation of law, satisfied by the new and substituted security, the debtor was at liberty to deal with the property as his own, and it remained in his possession, subject to any charge or lien impressed upon it either by the act of the party, or by operation of law, the same, after the forthcoming bond, as before the entry of the original judgment. Possibly as between the parties the judgment revived, but it would be against principle, and work manifest injustice, to give to it this retrospective operation, so as to extinguish the intermediately acquired legal rights of third persons. We deny to it this effect.

,Jt would be otherwise, if the forthcoming bond had been shown to’be void, as it might then be treated as a nullity, and as affording nq foundation for. the statutory judgment consequent upon the forfeiture. Under such circumstances, the lien of the original judgment would remain unaffected, and might be enforced by execution ; it would then, of Course, continue uninterrupted by the lien of any subsequent judgment entered up against the defendant.

This view of the statute was taken by the court of Mississippi, in Carleton et al. v. Osgood et. al. (6 How. 285) .

But no such ground is presented in the record before us ; nor did it exist in point of fact in the case. On the contrary, the forthcoming bond was in conformity to. the.

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Bluebook (online)
45 U.S. 4, 11 L. Ed. 850, 4 How. 4, 1846 U.S. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-clarke-scotus-1846.