Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Co. v. Louisville Banking Co.

58 S.W. 712, 119 Ky. 675, 1900 Ky. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 24, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 58 S.W. 712 (Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Co. v. Louisville Banking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Co. v. Louisville Banking Co., 58 S.W. 712, 119 Ky. 675, 1900 Ky. LEXIS 112 (Ky. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE GUFFY

Reversing.

In 1890 tlie Etheridge Manufacturing Company, a corporation, made an assignment to George Straeffer, as alleged, for the benefit of all its creditors. Afterwards some, if not all, of these appellees instituted suit and obtained attachnients which were properly levied, and also attacked the assignment as fraudulent and as made with the intent to delay and defraud creditors. Said assignee was also summoned as garnishee. N. N. Etheridge, one of the ‘stockholders and officers of said corporation, asserted a mortgage lien upon the proceeds in the hands of said assignee for the sum of $6,000, besides interest.

The court below sustained the attachments, and adjudged the assignment to be fraudulent, and set the same aside; but adjudged the mortgage claim of Etheridge to be a superior lien upon the fund which Straeffer had, under proper orders of the court, paid into court, said amount being more than $20,000, and after said judgment the court below allowed by order said Etheridge, through his attorneys, Lane & Burnett, to withdraw the money adjudged to him, and within a few days, if not on the very day said order was made, the money [678]*678was so withdrawn. These judgments and- orders and withdrawal of the money occurred in December, 1894.

After the rendition of the judgment and the said order and collection had been made, the creditors of the corporation prosecuted an appeal to the court of appeals, but these judgments were not superseded. On the 22d of October,- 1897, this court reversed the judgment of the lower court in so far as it allowed Etheridge any lien upon said fund prior or even equal to the lien of the attaching creditors. After the return of the cause to the circuit court these appellees obtained rules against the several appellants, ■ requiring them to pay back the several sums of money received by them.

- It appears from the responses and testimony in this case that after the withdrawal of said sum, which then amounted to $6,900, that on the 14th day of December, 1894, Etheridge paid out $2,500 thereof to- the Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Company on a mortgage debt of $5,500 to Mrs. E. L. Lane, ánd afterwards paid to said company $540; that he paid to his attorneys, Lane & Burnett, the sum of $690, which was their charge against him for services rendered him in these cases; that he paid to C. G. Hulsewede and C. B. Seymour, for services that they had rendered him, the sum of $1,380, and to S. E. Roach, on a mortgage debt, $250, and city and State taxes, $615.46, and to the Mutual Life Insurance Company, for insurance on his life, $295.32, and some other sums not necessary to mention.

The substance of the responses of the several appellants herein show that they received the various sums of money named therein in payment of debts due them from N. N. Etheridge; and it is claimed that Etheridge was authorized to withdraw the fund from the court, and the judgment adjudging the same to him was then valid, unreversed and had never been superseded.

[679]*679The court below adjudged the responses insufficient, and made the several rules absolute, and from these judgments these several appeals are prosecuted, and, by agreement, are heard together. It is the contention of appellees that they had a lien upon the $(>,900 in question, and that the circuit court erroneously adjudged the money to Etheridge, but they contend that such judgment did not destroy or annul their several liens; and inasmuch as the court of appeals reversed the judgment, and adjudged that the lien of the attaching creditors was superior to that of Etheridge, that the lien in fact and in law existed on the fund all the time; hence they argue that these appellants having received that identical money, that they were in law bound to repay the same under and in accordance with the rules issued as aforesaid. The. appellants insist that there was no lien upon the fund; that it was simply a liability upon the part of the holder to pay the same under proper orders of the court; and it is further contended that inasmuch as Etheridge, under the judgment of the trial court in the original case, was adjudged the money and the same paid to him, and by him to these appellants as a-foresaid, that they are under no legal obligation to refund the same, and that the attaching creditors must look alone to Etheridge. There is no claim by appellees that any effort was being made, or intention made known, that the creditors desired' or intended to supersede the original judgment.

We have not been referred to any decision of this court that expressly decides the question herein presented. It is, however, a familiar rule of law that a purchaser of land under a judgment acquired a good title, although the judgment may after war cue b“ reversed. It seems to be conceded that in cases where a person íá. garnished that if he pays the debt owing to the defendant, that- the party receiving the [680]*680money can not be held to account therefor; but all that the plaintiff can recover is a judgment against the garnishee. We do not think the ease of Hobson v. Hall, 13 Ky. Law Rep., 109, sustains the contention of appellees. It will be seen in that case that the parties who purchased the attached tobacco had executed a forthcoming bond, which bound them to have the tobacco, or the value forthcoming subject to the order of the court, and although the attachment under which the tobacco had been seized was finally discharged, yet the plaintiff had been allowed to file additional grounds of attachment before the bond had been discharged or sureties released, and the latter attachment having been sustained, the court adjudged a lien in favor of the attaching creditor upon the tobacco in question.

If, instead of the $6,900 being in money, there had been a contest between Etheridge and the other attaching creditors as to a lien upon personal property, for instance, horses and cattle, then in the custody of the court’s receiver, and the court had denied any lien to the attaching creditor and adjudged the property to Etheridge', it would seem that he could sell it and pass good title thereto at am- time while such judgment was in force.

In Freeman on Executions, volume 3, section 346, it is said: “Upon the reversal of a judgment, after a sale has been made under execution to a stranger to the suit, the'defendant must seek redress from the plaintiff. This redress was formerly obtained by a scire facias quare restitutionem non. This is still the remedy in some States in cases where the record does not show that the money realized from the sale had been paid to the plaintiff. Where the plaintiff has received the proceeds of the sale the defendant may recover in an action for money had- mid received. If, however, the money, after being paid to plaintiff, is by him paid to a third [681]*681person, it can not be recovered from such person, though he was one of the plaintiff’s attorneys.” . . .

In Rhorer on Judicial Sales, section 576, it is said: “Where the sale is to a third person and bona fide purchaser, and has been fully completed by confirmation, conveyance and payment, it will neither be avoided nor will it be set aside by reason of a subsequent reversal of the decree. This rule is so generally recognized as to scarcely require authorities to support it.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W. 712, 119 Ky. 675, 1900 Ky. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-trust-safety-vault-co-v-louisville-banking-co-kyctapp-1900.