Crary v. Dye

208 U.S. 515, 28 S. Ct. 360, 52 L. Ed. 595, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1462
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 24, 1908
Docket103
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 208 U.S. 515 (Crary v. Dye) 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
Crary v. Dye, 208 U.S. 515, 28 S. Ct. 360, 52 L. Ed. 595, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1462 (1908).

Opinion

Mr.. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of ejectment for certain mining ground in the Territory of New -Mexico.. Plaintiffs in. error claimed title by virtue of a sheriff’s sale in proceedings against Dye, one of the *516 defendants in error, reinforced by certain declarations of the latter, which, it is contended, constitute an estoppel against him to assert the invalidity of the sale or claim of title thereunto. There have been two trials of the action. The first resulted in a; verdict for- plaintiffs in error, which- was reversed by the Supreme Court of the Territory. 78 Pac. Rep. 533. The second trial resultéd in a judgment for defendants in error, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court.- This writ of error was then sued out.

The validity of the sale and an estoppel, based on the facts hereinafter referred to, were relied on by plaintiffs in error at the first trial, and they secured a verdict by the instructions of the court. The Supreme-Court of the Territory reversed it, adjudging the sale to be invalid on the ground that an alias attachment was not authorized by the laws of the Territory. 78 Pac. Rep. 533. On the second appeal the court refused to review this decision, holding it to be the "law of the case,’\and not open to-further review.. It confined its consideration to the question of estoppel and decided the question adversely to the contention of plaintiffs in error, and affirmed the judgment against them. This writ of error brings up both/questions, which we will'consider in their order:'

1. The statutes of the Territory distinguish between original. and ancillary attachments. Sections 2686 and 2721 óf the Compiled Laws of New Mexico.’ There is- no provision for an alias attachment, and it was hence concluded by the Supreme Court of the Territory that an alias attachment was not authorized, and that a judgment dependent thereon was void and could' be attacked collaterally: The procedure in attachment is provided for-in chapter II of the Compiled Laws of New Mexico,. §§ 2686 to 2737, both inclusive. A summary of the applicable •sections is inserted in the margin. 1

*517 There is no provision for an alias attachment, and we think, the implication of the statute is against it, certainly against it excépt upon filing a new affidavit and bond and a new publi *518 cation of notice. We have seen that an affidavit and bond are; required and the proceedings, are that when a defendant cannot be cited and his property shall be attached, if he' did not appear within the first two,days of the return term of the writ the court shall order publication to be madé stating the amount of the demand, that his property has been attached and tjiat unless he appears at the next term judgment will be rendered against'him and his property' (property attached, §2703) sold to satisfy the same. In other words,-the attachment must precede the publication and constitutes the ground of publication. The summons to the defendant is thrpugh his property and does ñot extend beyond.it. The only consequence of his default is the, sale. of the property attached—not some other property or property attached subsequently to publication. The publication cannot be ordered until .the execution of the writ of attachment and its'return. Section 2701.- And to the same effect, as -we have seen, in § 2702.

It is,, however,- contended by plaintiffs in error 'that subsection 24 of § 2685 prescribed the procedure of- publication of summons, not §§2701, 2702,-and that subsection 24 provides-that upon filing, a sworn pleading or affidavit showing cause for’ *519 publication the clerk shall give notice of the pendency of the action in some newspaper published in the' county where fhe action is pending, which notice shall contain the names of the parties to the cause,'.the court in which it is pending and a statement of the general objects of the action, and shall notify the defendant that unless he enters his appearance before the day named therein judgment will be rendered against him by default. If this contention be true it is difficult to account for §§2701,2702, and the scheme provided for the commencement of actions by attachment. Nor do we think the contention is supported by the fact .that by subsection 175 of § 2685- it is provided that the act “shall not affect actions of replevin or writs of attachment, except as to the form of action,” and the amendment subsequently' made excepting from the operation of § 2685, “proceedings by attachment.” The amendment was made, no doubt, to put the meaning of § 175 beyond any controversy.- Besides, subsection 179 provides that “the former practice in law and equity shall be retained in all eases and proceedings not comprehended within the terms and intention of this code.”

,. But even if plaintiffs in error be right about subsection 24, an alias attachment would not thereby be justified. The Supreme Court of the Territory has expressly. decided that, an -alias attachment is not authorized, and we have recently decided that the views of the local courts are very persuasive of the construction of the local-statutes.

In the -pending cause a petition in the attachment suit was filed in the District Court of the county of Lincoln on the fifth of March, 1898, and on the same day an affidavit was filed stating that the defendant could not be served “ in the ordinary way or in any. way except by publication.” A writ of attachment was issued on the eighth of March. The sheriff made his re'turn thereon on the sixteenth, certifying that he had levied upon and attached certain real estate, which was described, and “that the defendant, Benj min H. Dye, is not in my county -and supposed to be in the State of Ohio.”

*520 The record shows an alias attachment issued on the eleventh •of May, 1898. The return of the sheriff shows that the alias writ came to his hands on the twenty-seventh of May, and that he levied the same on the twenty-eighth of May, on the mining claim now in controversy.

The first publication oPthe notice was on the seventeenth of March, 1898, and the last on the fourteenth of April, 1898. Pasted to the affidavit stating those facts is a paper-headed “Notice of Suit,” by which Benjamin.H. Dye is notified “that a suit of assumpsit by attachment has been commenced against him,” and that unless he enter his appearance on the fourth of, June, 1898, judgment would be rendered against him in said cause by default. The record contains no other publica-, tion or notice, but it leaves no doubt that it was upon that publication the default of the defendant was based. This is established by the motion for judgment, filed by the attorney in the case, which alleges service by publication and that the appearance day was June 4, 1898. This motion was filed August 19, -1898, but proof of publication was not filed until December 31, the, day judgment was taken. The judgment recites that the cause coming on tó be heard, “it is considered that the defendant is in default for failure to answer, and, therefore, the court hears the evidence of plaintiff and assesses the damages on the two causes of action contained in the complaint at $143.

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Bluebook (online)
208 U.S. 515, 28 S. Ct. 360, 52 L. Ed. 595, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crary-v-dye-scotus-1908.