Clark & Freeman v. Patterson

58 Vt. 676
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Vt. 676 (Clark & Freeman v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark & Freeman v. Patterson, 58 Vt. 676 (Vt. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Walker, J.

This is an action on the case against the defendant, sheriff of Orleans County, for the default of his deputy, George W. Jenness, to serve and return an execution in favor of the plaintiffs against L. E. Eaton, which was issued upon a judgment for $192.66, obtained by them against Eaton, before a justice on the 21st day of April, 1884, on a writ sued out by them on the 12th day of April and served by Jenness, as deputy sheriff, by attaching certain sewing machines, then in his custody, subject to two former attachments made by him, as such deputy, on writs in favor of Jethro J. Hill, one against L. E. Eaton and the other against Charles and L. E. Eaton, returnable at the February Term of Orleans County Court, 1884. Jenness as such deputy sold the sewing machines on the plaintiffs’ execution, dated April 22, 1884, for $252.20 before the return day thereof and holds the avails, which he claims are first to be applied upon the two former attachments in favor of Hill, and refuses to pay the plaintiffs. The'plaintiffs never consented to the machines being attached and sold subject to the Hill attachments.

[678]*678September 29, 1883, Jenness as deputy commenced the service of the Jethro J. Hill writs by attaching the same sewing-machines which he afterwards attached subject to the Hill attachment upon the plaintiffs’ writs. On the 31st day of October, 1883, said Hill was duly adjudged by the Probate Court for the district of Orleans to be an insane person, and on the 5th day of November, 1883, Jenness was duly appointed and qualified as his guardian, and entered upon the discharge of his duties as such. On the 24th day of January, 1884, after becoming guardian of Hill, Jenness as deputy sheriff completed the service of the Hill writs by delivering to each of the defendants a copy of the attachments with a list of the property attached attested by him and by making a return of the property attached and his doings on the writs. The writs were subsequently-entered in court and Jenness entered as guardian of Hill to prosecute them and the same are still pending.

On the 24th day of January, 1884, the Hill writs were put in the hands of Deputy Sheriff Miles, who made further service thereof by attaching one chip and delivering to each defendant a copy with the return of Ms doings thereon.

The plaintiffs claim that Jenness by accepting the guardianship of Hill became under the law the real plaintiff in the suits of Hill against the Eatons and was thereby disqualified to complete the service of the same and that all his doings in those suits as deputy after the acceptance of such guardianship are absolutely void, and that the attachments made by him in favor of Hill must be treated as legally abandoned. The defendant claims that the attachments are valid; that Jenness could, after becoming guardian, legally complete the service thereof, and that if he could not lawfully complete the service thereof the attachments are still valid, and that the defendants by appearing and answering to said suits on the service made by Deputy Miles waived the want of legal copies.

The plaintiffs’ right to recover rests upon the validity of [679]*679the attachment of the sewing machines upon the two writs of Jethro J. Hill against the Eatons; and the validity of these attachments depends upon the authority of Jenness as deputy sheriff, after his appointment as guardian of Hill, to make return of the property attached thereon by him before his appointment, and to complete the service by attesting and delivering copies to the defendants as he did on the 24th day of January, 1884.

An attachment is not complete and perfect until the officer’s return is made. An officer may seize and hold personal property until the return' day, but unless he make a proper statement of it in writing on the writ and complete the service as required by the statute, it cannot be deemed an attachment.

An attachment of property is a method prescribed by statute for creating a lien upon the debtor’s property, without his consent, to respond to the exigency of the writ and to satisfy the judgment that may be obtained, against him. To constitute a valid lien upon property by an attachment all the requirements of the statute in making it must be strictly followed. It is a general principle that any failure to comply with what is enacted as necessary to be done by the officer in making an attachment, must be held to be fatal to any lien attempted to be acquired thereby. Sumner v. Sherman, 13 Vt. 609. The same principle applies in a proceeding for acquiring a lien upon property by virtue of a statute without the consent of the owner, as governs in a proceeding for acquiring title to property under the provision of a statute without the consent of the owner.

Sec. 881 R. L. requires that “a copy of the attachment and list of articles attached, attested by the officer serving the same, shall be delivered to the party whose goods and chattels are so attached,” etc.

The official attestation of the attachment and list of articles attached, and the official certification in the officer’s return on the writ, are essential parts of the service to make a [680]*680valid attachment. Without this the service is essentially defective. Swetland v. Stevens, 6 Vt. 577. The .return on the writ to be effectual must not only show that this requirement of the statute has been complied with but it must be made and attested by an officer having authority under the statute to make the service. Every step that the statute requires to be taken in making and completing the attachment is an essential part of the service and must be made by an officer authorized in some of the ways provided by statute to make it. If it is not so made no lien will be acquired upon the property against a subsequent attaching creditor nor against the debtor unless he waives the want of compliance with the statute. It is as essential that the copies of attachment and list of articles attached shall be attested and the return on the writ certified by a duly authorized officer as it is • that the property taken shall be seized and held by a proper officer.

The power to serve a legal process is conferred and regulated wholly by statute; and a valid attachment of property can be made only by such officer as the statute gives power to make it.

The question presented is not whether the sheriff or some other deputy sheriff might have completed the service commenced by Jenness, but whether the attachments commenced before his appointment as guardian and completed by him after his appointment are valid. No other officer delivered any attested copies of the attachments and list of articles attached to the defendants, or attempted to complete the service commenced by him. Deputy Miles, to whom the writs were delivered for further service, made no return as to the sewing machines attached by Jenness, and his doings on the writ in no way cured any defect in the attachment service commenced by Jenness, who alone undertook to complete the service of the attachments by attesting and delivering copies and making return on the writs after his appointment as guardian.

[681]*681It is well settled that letters of guardianship create a trust coupled with an interest. Pepper v. Stone, 10 Vt. 427.

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Related

Swetland v. Stevens
6 Vt. 577 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1834)
Kelly v. Paris
10 Vt. 261 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1838)
Pepper v. Stone
10 Vt. 427 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1838)
Sumner v. Sherman
13 Vt. 609 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1841)
Bank of Rutland v. Parsons
21 Vt. 199 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1849)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Vt. 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-freeman-v-patterson-vt-1886.