Bush v. Visant

40 Ark. 124
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 Ark. 124 (Bush v. Visant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Visant, 40 Ark. 124 (Ark. 1882).

Opinion

STATEMENT.

English, C. J.

The material facts disclosed by the transcript in this case, stated in the order in which they occurred, follow:— ^

On the 22nd February, 1878, Crockett & Yancey commenced suit by attachment before a Justice of the Peace of Arkansas county, upon an account for $50. against Willis P. Bush, a non-resident. On the filing of the account, &g., an attachment was issued to a Constable, a warning order made, and Freeman & Johnson appointed attorneys ad litem for the non-resident defendant, Bush.

The Constable returned upon the attachment that he could find no personal property in the county belonging *to defendant, and that he had levied upon the north half of the south east quarter of section nineteen, Township four S. R. three W., as the property of Bush.

On the 29th of April, 1878, the day set for trial, publication of the warning order in the Vindicator, a newspaper published in Arkansas county, WUs proved, plaintiffs appeared by attorneys, and Ereeman & Johnson, who had been appointed by the Justice, attorneys ad litem for defendant, and accepted the appointment, also appeared, and asked leave to enter a general denial of the account sued on, which was granted, and demanded a jury, which was ordered, and there was a trial, and verdict in favor of plaintiffs for $30. The Justice rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs against defendant for $30 and costs, to be made out of the tract of land attached, and that a copy of the judgment be certified to the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Arkansas County, to the end that execution might be issued in the manner prescribed by law. Ereeman & Johnson, attorneys ad litem for defendant, asked for an appeal from the judgment to the Circuit Court, which was granted on condition that the affidavit required by law should be filed.

On the 17th of June, 1878, Crockett & "Yancy, the plaintiffs in the attachment suit, assigned the judgment to Arthur B. Crawford; and on the 21st of the same month, a certified transcript of the docket entries and judgment of the Justice of the Peace was filed in the'office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court, (no appeal bond having been executed), and an abstract of the judgment entered by the Clerk in the judgment docket.

On the 29th of June, 1878, the Clerk issued to the Sheriff a special execution (without the execution of any bond of indemnity) commanding him to sell the tract of land attached. The Sheriff advertised and sold the land, and it was purchasby Arthur B. Crawford for $45, who obtained a certificate of purchase, and on the 13th of June, 1881, and after the time of redemption expired, the Sheriff (the successor of the officer who made the salej executed to Crawford a deed for the land, acknowledged before a Notary Public.

On the next day Crawford and wife, by deed of that date, conveyed the land to Edward Visant.

On the 27th of June, 1881, Edward Visant commenced this action of ejectment for the land, in the Circuit Court of Arkansas County, against George W. Toland, a tenant of Willis P. Bush, exhibiting as evidence of title the deed from the Sheriff to Crawford, and the deed from Crawford and wife to himself, and alleging that Bush was the owner in fee of the land when attached, and that defendant Toland held possession of the land as his tenant, &c.

Toland was served with process, and Bush, on the application of Wm. H. Halliburton, Esq’r., as his attorney, was made defendant; and an answer filed for him, denying the title of plaintiff, and setting up title in himself; and making exceptions to the Sheriff’s deed exhibited and relied on by plaintiff, on the grounds

1. That the Justice of the Peace had no jurisdiction to condemn the land to sale, &c.

2. That the Justice had no jurisdiction after prayer and grant of appeal.

3. That no bond was filed by the plaintiffs in the attachment suit before the Clerk issued the execution to the Sheriff for the sale of the land, &c. t

The Court overruled the exceptions, and on trial of the case before the Court sitting as a jury, the plaintiff was permitted to read the Sheriff’s deed in evidence, against the objection of defendant.

Plaintiff also read in evidence, besides the deeds relied on by him,-from the judgment docket of the Clerk, an abstract of the judgment of the Justice of the Peace entered therein by the Clerk; and admitted that no bond had been filed before the issuance of the execution thereon,

Defendant read in evidence a deed exhibited with his answer, showing his title to the land; and also a transcript of the proceedings and judgment before the Justice of the Peace in the attachment suit.

Declarations of law were made by the Court, to which defendant excepted, and other declarations were moved by him, some of which were refused, and he excepted; which will be noticed below.»

The Court found for plaintiff, and rendered judgment in his favor for possession of the land; defendant moved for a new trial, which was refused, and he took a bill of exceptions, and appealed to this Court.

OPINION.

I. “A Justice of the Peace shall not have jurisdiction where a lien on land, or title or possession thereto is involved.” Constitution of 1874, Art. VII, sec. 40.

The act of 23d January, 1875, (acts of 1874-5, p. Ill) provides that when a Constable to whom an attachment is directed by a Justice of the Peace, can find no personal proper - ty of defendant, he shall levy the writ upon any lands, tenements, town lots, equity of redemption, &c., belonging to defendant, subject to execution, and make return, describing the property levied upon. Sec. 1.

Section 2d of the act provides that if plaintiff obtain judgment in the suit in which land, &c., has been attached, he may file a transcript of the proceedings and judgment of the Justice in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court, which, when entered on the judgment docket, shall have the same force and effect as a judgment rendered in the Circuit Court, upon which an order of sale may be issued by the clerk, directed to the Sheriff, under which the attached property may be sold, &c.

The act makes no provision for the Justice of the Peace issuing the attachment, and rendering the judgment, to make any adjudication as to a lien upon, or the title to, or possession of the land attached. It provides for a convenient and safe mode of subjecting lands of non-resident debtors, &c., to satisfaction, by attachment, of debts within the jurisdiction of Justices of the Peace.

The act is not in conflict with the clause of the Constitution quoted above, or any other. *

II. It appears that the attorneys ad litem appointed for Bush, by the Justice of the Peace in the attachment suit, asked for an appeal to the Circuit Court from the judgment of the Justice, which was granted on condition that the affiidavit required by law should be filed.

It does not appear that the affidavit was filed, but if it was, .

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ark. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-visant-ark-1882.