Claypoole v. Pope

9 Ohio C.C. 309
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio C.C. 309 (Claypoole v. Pope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claypoole v. Pope, 9 Ohio C.C. 309 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Summers, J.

September 13, 1893, the Parry Manufacturing Company brought suit against William C. Reynolds, in the court of common pleas of Franklin county, Ohio, to recover $2,637.53, with interest from September 5th, 1893; it gave bond with Frank C. Volz and William A. Pope as sureties, and on the same day attached certain personal property of said Reynolds. On the 14th day of September, 1893, Reynolds made an as[310]*310signment, for the benefit of his creditors, to the plaintiff, Claypoole. The deed of assignment covered the property attached, but contained no words of general description, such as “all my property.” Reynolds filed his motion to discharge the attachment; the motion was overruled ; he prosecuted error to the circuit court; the court below was reversed and judgment rendered discharging the attachment. Meantime the plaintiff had obtained judgment in the court of common pleas, and the attached property had been sold. After the rendition of the judgment of the circuit court, the assignee demanded the proceeds, and upon refusal, brought suit in the court of common pleas on the attachment bond to recove^ damages.

The defendant Pope demurred;' the demurrer was overruled; he then answered. Subsequently leave was given him to withdraw his answer and to refile his demurrer, which he did, and thereupon the demurrer, as to the general ground, was sustained, and, the plaintiff not asking to plead further, judgment was entered dismissing the petition. Plaintiff excepted to the sustaining of the demurrer and the rendering of the judgment, and filed his petition in error in this court to reverse the judgment.

The question is, as we understand it, can the assignee in trust for the benefit of creditors, of attached personal property, maintain a suit on the attachment bond, after the attachment has been discharged, when the property has been sold in the action during the pendency of the proceeding to vacate ?

We think he can. The wrongful attachment did not before the sale divest the assignor of the ownership of the property, but of his possession ouly.

While the title of the property is still in him, he assigns it to another, who, upon the discharge of the attachment, no sale having been made, is entitled to the property, and the property having been sold by the order of the court, we think the bond stands in the place of the property, and that the assignee is entitled to the value of the property.

[311]*311' Section 5563a provides that “ a party affected by an order discharging or refusing to discharge, an order of attactment, may file a petition in error, etc., “ and the original action shall proceed to trial and judgment in every respect, as though no petition in error had been prosecuted.”

Section 5555 provides, “ If judgment be rendered for the plaintiff, it shall be satisfied as follows: So much of the property remaining in the hands of the officer, after applying the money arising from the sale of perishable property, and so much of the personal property, * * * as may be necessary to satisfy the judgment, shall be sold by order of the court, * * * and the money arising therefrom * * * shall be applied to satisfy the judgment and costs, * * * and any surplus of the attached property, or its proceeds, shall be returned to the defendant.”

Either party may prosecute error to the order discharging or refusing to discharge the attachment. If the order is that the attachment shall be discharged, the attaching creditor, by filing a petition in error and giving an undertaking, may maintain the status quo of the property ; that is, its possession in the sheriff, and subject to the order of the court in which the action is pending.

On the other hand, if the order is that the attachment shall not be vacated, the owner is without remedy, if pending his proceedings in error the property is sold, unless he can recover on the bond. The legislative intent must have been that the bond should answer for the property; otherwise, the right to prosecute error would be vain. If the property has been sold, the owner has sustained damages by the wrongful attachment to at least the value of the property.

The assignment of title to the property carries with it the right to its value in the event it is sold under the wrongful attachment.

“It is an established doctrine that an equitable assignment of a specific fund, in the hands of a third person, creates an equitable property in such fund. If, therefore, A. has a specific [312]*312fund in the hands of JB., or, in other words, B., as a depositary or otherwise, holds a specific sum of money which he is bound to pay to A., and if A. agrees with C. that the money shall be paid to C., or assigns it to C., or gives to C. an order upon B., for the money, the agreement, assignment, or order creates an equitable interest or property in the fund in favor of the assignee, C., and it is unnecessary that B. should consent, or promise to hold it for, or to pay it to such assignee.” Pomeroy’s Eq. Juris., sec. 1280.

“And the assignee may not only recover the money from the original depositary, but may pursue it, or its proceeds, under any change of form as long as it can be certainly identified.”

Again: “The doctrine is universal, that any valid,’operative assignment of the debt, whether evidenced by a bond, note, or otherwise, is also an efficient assignment of the mortgage, and vests the assignee with all the equitable rights, interests, and remedies of the mortgagee. ■ Pomeroy, section 1210.

Again: “When chattels, which have been mortgaged, or assigned as security, are sold or exchanged by the owner, the lien upon the original articles will extend to the resulting fund or the substituted goods.” Pomeroy, section 1281.

Upon equitable principles, such as these, it was held in Alsdorf v. Reed, 45 Ohio St. 653, “ where, in proceedings in attachment, the process of garnishment is served upon one who is indebted to the defendant upon notes secured by mortgage, and judgment is rendered for the plaintiff, the notes and morgage■ are in legal effect assigned to the plaintiff, and he may maintain an action to foreclose the mortgage.”

And in Edwards v.Edwards, 24 Ohio St. 402, that “A judgment creditor, who seeks by action to subject to the payment of his judgment a claim for purchase-money due to the judgment debtor as vendor, is entitled to the enforcement of the. vendor’s lien, to the same extent it might have been enforced if the action had been by the vendor against the vendee.”

[313]*313In Slosson v. Ferguson, 31 Minn, 448, it was held: “In proceedings under the statute to secure a release of property from attachment by means of a bond to the plaintiff, a bond in favor of the plaintiff, specifically named as obligee, conditioned that if “said plaintiff recover judgment in said action,” etc., is a compliance with the statute providing for a bond to the plaintiff conditioned that “if the plaintiff recovers judgment in the action, etc.

“ A plaintiff to whom such a bond had been executed made an assignment, pursuant to statute, for the benefit of creditors. The assignee was substituted as plaintiff in the action, and recovered judgment. Held, that the obligors 'in the bond became liable to the assignee thereon.”

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio C.C. 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claypoole-v-pope-ohiocirct-1895.