Charles City Plow & Manf'g Co. v. Jones & Co.

71 Iowa 234
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 10, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 71 Iowa 234 (Charles City Plow & Manf'g Co. v. Jones & Co.) 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.

Bluebook
Charles City Plow & Manf'g Co. v. Jones & Co., 71 Iowa 234 (iowa 1887).

Opinion

Reed, J.

, 1. ATTACHmfbond^°ev£ deneeI. The grounds on which the attachment was sued out were “ that defendants are about to dispose of their

property with intent to defraud their creditors, X. X J ? an(^ tNat defendants have property or rights in action which they conceal.” On the trial a member of defendants’ firm was examined as a witness on behalf of his firm, and was asked whether the firm, before the attachment was issued, was about to dispose of its property with intent to defraud its creditors, or whether there was any talk or intimation or intent on their part of doing so in the future. It 'was alleged, in an amended abstract filed by appellees, that these questions were not objected to, and, this allegation being denied by appellant in an additional abstract, we were required, in determining the controversy, to examine the transcript. We find, upon an examination of the bill of exceptions, that the questions were objected to on the ground of incompetency. Under the rule laid down in Selz v. Belden, 48 Iowa, 461, the objection should have been sustained.

2. -: return of sheriff: what it is evidence of. II. The writ of attachment was directed to the sheriff’ of Kossuth county, and was levied on property in that county; the levy being made by the deputy-sheriff, who certified in his return that he had seized, on the writ, eighty-five plows, two churns, a ledger and day-book, one safe, two buggies, five corn-planters and five horses, and had garnished certain persons as supposed debtors of the defendants. Before the writ was returned, however, all of the property except the eighty-nve plows was released, and the fact of such release was shown by the certificate of the sheriff indorsed on the writ. The [237]*237plows, when the levy was made, were situated in a building which is described in the return as the east warehouse, while the other property (except the five horses) was in the business house in which defendants carried on business. At the term at which the cause was tried, the sheriff filed what is denominated an amendment to the return, in which he certified that, when the levy was made, by direction of plaintiff, he seized and locked up both buildings in which the property was situated, and that he kept possession of the storeroom or building in which defendants carried on business for one month, when he released it, and restored it to defendants, and that he continued to hold possession of the warehouse in which the plows were situated.

One of the matters complained of by defendants, and for which they claimed damages, was that they were deprived of the use of these buildings. On the trial they offered the amendment to the return in evidence, and it was admitted by the court, over the objection of plaintiff. There is no claim that the writ was levied on either of the buildings, or that the officer had any intention of seizing them. Neither is it shown by the return that it was necessary to retain possession of the store-room as a place of deposit for the articles which were in it when the levy was made and were seized by the officer. We have, therefore, no occasion to inquire whether the sheriff might occupy it as a place of deposit for the goods, to the exclusion of defendants, and without their consent. It is clear, however, that, unless he occupied' it for some purpose which was connected with the execution of the writ, his act was a trespass; and it may be conceded that, if plaintiff directed him to commit the act, it is liable therefor. JBut whether their liability therefor would be on the attachment bond we do not determine, as that question was not raised by the objection. But it does not apjjear by the return that the act was committed in the execution of the writ. It appears simply that he levied on the property; and that, by direction of the plaintiff, he [238]*238•locked up the building, and that he retained possession of it for one month.

The sheriff is required by the statute (Code, § 3010) to ' return upon every attachment what he has done under it. The return should show what property was attached, and the disposition made of it, and all acts done by the officer in the execution of the writ, and his return is evidence against the parties as to the acts done by him in executing it, which are required by law to be shown by the return. But, under the ruling of the circuit' court, the return was received as evidence of the locking up and retention of the building by the sheriff, and that this was done by plaintiff’s direction. We are of the opinion that it was not competent evidence against it of those facts. If the sheriff had returned that in making the levy he had committed an assault on defendant, and that in committing that act he acted under the direction of the plaintiff, it would hardly be contended that in an action against the plaintiff ,for the assault the return would be admissible in evidence to prove either the commission of the assault, or that it was committed by its direction. Yet, upon the facts shown by the return, there is no difference in principle between this case and that. The return recites, in effect, that the officer, by plaintiff’s direction, committed a trespass against defendant’s property, while in the supposed case the'act would be a trespass against his person.

3. -: WRONGFUL SUING OUT: ADVICE OF COUNSEL WHO ARE STOCKHOLDERS of the plaintiff. III. Plaintiff claimed that, before it sued out the writ, it made a statement of the facts to counsel, who advised it that upon the facts there was probable ground for the action, and that in suing: out the writ it ° acted on that advice. The proof showed that advice was given by a Arm of attorneys, both members of which held stock in the corporation, (plaintiff being a corporation,) and one of'whom was an officer of the corporation; and the circuit court instructed the jury to disregard the evidence given in sup[239]*239port of tlie defense. By this ruling the court in effect held as matter of law, that, owing to the relations which the attorneys bore to the corporation, it could not show that if acted on their advice in suing out the writ, in rebuttal of the presumption of malice which might arise from the fact that no probable cause for the action existed. This is erroneous. The question was one of fact. The counsel were not necessarily incapable of giving a correct opinion on the fact because of their pecuniary interest in the result. The question in every such case is whether the party has honestly sought the advice of competent and trustworthy counsel, and acted in good faith on the advice given him; and that question is for the jury, and should be determined by them, like any other question of fact, from all the circumstances of the case. Center v. Spring, 2 Iowa, 393.

4.--: -:--: evidence of conversation with counsel. 5. -:-- — : advice of lawyer not in practice. IV. The petition was sworn to by plaintiff’s business manager. The president of the corporation was examined as a witness, and testified that he was present at the consultation with the attorneys when it was determined that the writ should be sued out. He was asked to state the conversation between the business manager and the attorneys, but, on defendants’ objection, the question was excluded. It should have been allowed. Plaintiff was required to prove that the advice of the counsel, on which it claims to have acted, was given upon a full and fair statement of the facts of the case, and the evidence sought to be elicited related to that matter.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Iowa 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-city-plow-manfg-co-v-jones-co-iowa-1887.