First National Bank v. Wheeling, Lake Erie & Pittsburg Coal Co.

11 Ohio C.C. 412
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio C.C. 412 (First National Bank v. Wheeling, Lake Erie & Pittsburg Coal Co.) 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
First National Bank v. Wheeling, Lake Erie & Pittsburg Coal Co., 11 Ohio C.C. 412 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Laubie, J.

This cause comes into this court by appeal, and was heard upon a demurrer to the petition.

It is an action brought for the purpose of determining priority of liens, and enforcing the lien of a judgment on the part of the plaintiff against George E. Medill, and selling the coal underlying a farm in this county.

The petition alleges the obtaining of the judgment during the April term, 1888, in Franklin county, Ohio, upon which an execution was issued June 19, 1888, to the sheriff of this ■county, and by him levied on the land June 21, 1888, and which was entered by him and set out in full on the foreign execution docket on the same day. The sheriff thereupon returned the execution, without further proceedings, by order of the plaintiff, the execution creditor.

• At the time of the levy there was a mortgage on the land ■of |6,700, and on November 2, 1888, the mortgagee released the coal underlying the land from the lien of the mortgage; and on March 30, 1891, the surface and all the land but the coal was sold at judicial sale and the proceeds applied to the payment of the mortgage and other liens superior to plain[414]*414tiff’s, and exhausted. On December 19, 1888, the execution debtor sold the coal at private sale to one Hahn, and, a few days thereafter Hahn sold the same to the defendant,. The Wheeling, Lake Erie & Pittsburgh Coal Co.

By reason of this sale of the coal, and of other liens thereon, the plaintiff, on September 3, 1892, brought this proceeding to establish its lien as against the Coal Company and the other defendants, and for a sale of the coal, setting1 out all these facts in full. The coal company filed a general demurrer to the petition.

This is all that is necessary to state of the facts alleged in the petition, for the disposition of the questions before us.

The point made is. that the execution having been returned, under the orders of the plaintiff, without further proceedings, the levy created no lien upon the lands or the coal, and that to hold it a valid lien would be a fraud upon the purchasers; and to sustain this claim, counsel for the Coal Company rely upon Sturgeon v. Hull, assignee, et ah, 8 C. C. R. 269; in which it was held: “Where an ’execution is issued to a foreign county, with instructions to the officer that when real estate is levied upon it shall be returned after levy, and no further action had to enforce collection, a mortgage executed subsequently to the levy will have priority.’’

The court say, p. 276: “The statute, however, provides-what the officer must do when the levy is made. That is,, he must have the real estate appraised; and such appraisement must be returned forthwith to the clerk of the court from which the writ issued. It is then the duty of the officer to advertise the premises for sale. After the premises-are offered for sale, the officer is required to make due return of the writ with all his proceedings thereon.

“If the execution is returned and the property not sold, section 5405 provides: ‘Other executions may be issued to> sell the same. ’

[415]*415“It appears: First — That if the provisions of the statute are interfered with,and the officer is controlled by the creditor,no further action can be had under the levy. An execution is placed in the hands of an officer to enforce the execution of a judgment, and not merely to secure a lien. The statute directs what the officer shall do. If the creditor waives his right to proceed under the statute, he cannot then claim a priority over subsequent mortgagees.Í^In other words, he cannot use the execution laws to create a mortgage lien. ”

And on page 277, the court say:

“The Supreme Court of Alabama, in Alabama Gold Life Insurance Co. v. McCreary, 65 Ala. 127, held: ‘When an execution is placed in the hands of a sheriff with instructions not to sell until further orders, it is not in his hands for any effective purpose, and its lien is postponed to that of any subsequent execution creditor, while the older exeecution is thus kept dormant. The attempt to fasten and preserve a lien by'such method is a constructive fraud on creditors and subsequent purchasers,and postpones the supposed lien thereby attempted to be created, to the lien of any subsequent execution creditor, who establishes his lien while the older execution is kept dormant. ’ The views entertained are fully recognized in Freeman on Judgments, 206.”

The foregoing are the authorities relied upon in Sturgeon v. Hull, supra, for the holding in that case.

Questions of this character depend so largely, in their determination, upon the terms of the particular statute, that but little aid can be had from the decisions of other states. In many states judgments are not made liens upon lands at all. .And such seems to be the case in Alabama, as to lands in the county where the judgment is rendered. The lien, in such cases, seems to attach to the execution. Their code provides that the writ is a lien on the lands in the county from the time it is received by the sheriff, and continues as long as a writ is regularly issued and delivered to him without the lapse of an entire term. As^to lands in [416]*416another county, it provides that if a certified abstract of the judgment is filed and registered in the probate judge’s office of such other county, such judgment shall be a lien on the lands in such county for the period of ten years, and shall be notice thereof to all persons.

No lien can be obtained on lands in the county where the judgment was rendered except by the delivery of an execution to the sheriff, and under the holding in the case cited, Alabama Gold Life Ins. Co. v. McCreary, it lasts only long enough^for the sheriff to sell the land,

The very object and purpose of the statute, it seems to me, is defeated by such holding, and the judgment creditor cannot obtain a lien under the statute that he could not obtain without the statute. As to lands in other counties, as we have seen, the creditor, by filing the abstract of the judgment, as heretofore stated, may fasten a lien upon such lands for the period of ten years. Truly a peculiar state of affairs; and sufficient to show that the extent, duration and effect of judgment liens under our statutes cannot safely be determined by Alabama law.

The reference in Sturgeon v. Hull, assignee, supra, to Freeman on Judgments, I think may be a mistake. Neither at page 206, nor section 206, of that work, is the question noticed, and I do not find it discussed in the book. I think the reference intended must be Freeman on Executions, sec. 206. In that section, and in the chapter of which it is a part, the author treats of the lien of executions, but not of the lien of judgments. These are two separate and distinct things, and the law applicable to the one has little or no application to the other. The one relates almost exclusively to personal property, and the other to real property.

“At common law a fi. fa. was a lien upon the personal property of the defendant from its teste. This might be the first day of the term, and hence long anterior to the issue of the writ, and to the actual rendition of the judgment. ” Ibid,, sec. 199.

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Related

Ala. Gold Life Insurance v. McCreary
65 Ala. 127 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio C.C. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-wheeling-lake-erie-pittsburg-coal-co-ohiocirct-1891.