Fox v. Cronan

2 A. 444, 47 N.J.L. 493, 1885 N.J. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 2 A. 444 (Fox v. Cronan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Cronan, 2 A. 444, 47 N.J.L. 493, 1885 N.J. LEXIS 7 (N.J. 1885).

Opinions

Van Syckel, J.

Eox, the plaintiff, held in pledge fifty-nine cattle to secure the sum of $4000, due to him from one Blumenthal, the owner of the cattle.

While these cattle wore in the possession of Eox, another creditor of Blumenthal caused an attachment to be issued against him, directed to Cronan, the sheriff of Hudson county.

The writ of attachment was placed by the sheriff in the hands of Martin, his special deputy, to be served. When Martin served the writ notice was given to him of the claim of Eox upon the cattle. The sheriff took a bond of indemnity from the plaintiff in attachment, and took possession of and held the cattle under said writ. In his return to the writ he certified that he had attached the fifty-nine cattle, appraised at $23 each, without making any reference to the claim of Eox, the pledgee. The writ was served on the evening of August 8th, 1882, and on the next day an auditor was [504]*504appointed in the attachment proceeding, and the sheriff put the cattle in the possession of the auditor on the same day.

Thereupon Fox, the pledgee, brought suit against the sheriff to recover his damages for the taking of the cattle from him.

The first question presented by the case is, whether a sheriff by virtue of an execution or attachment in his hands against the pledgor or mortgagor of personal chattels can remove them from the actual custody of the pledgee or mortgagee, and hold possession of them without paying or offering to pay the debt for which they were pledged.

It is conceded that while the mortgagor retains possession of goods they may lawfully be seized by virtue of an' execution against him, and his interest in them sold to satisfy the judgment debt.

Woodside v. Adams, 11 Vroom 417, is relied upon to support the more advanced doctrine that the goods may be taken out of the possession of the pledgee or mortgagee by the officer under the authority of a writ against the pledgor or mortgagor.

In that case the property involved consisted of furniture in a hotel. The mortgagee took possession of it on the 22d of August, but did not remove the goods — he merely inventoried, appraised and advertised them for sale on the 6th of September then next.

On the 4th of September a landlord’s warrant was delivered to the defendant, and executed by him by a levy on the furniture. The defendant did not remove or sell them before the replevin was sued out. The Supreme Court, in a very able opinion, in the conclusions of which, as applied to the facts of that case, I fully concur, held that replevin would not lie by the mortgagee.

The court said that nothing whatever had been done by the defendant, so far as disclosed by the case, which interfered with the plaintiff’s rights under the mortgage — that the plaintiff might have proceeded with his sale under the mortgage without any interference or embarrassment consequent upon [505]*505the execution of the distress warrant, leaving to the landlord the surplus goods that remained after the mortgage debt was satisfied.

The rule formulated by the court permitted the officer to take such possession only as would enable him to make a legal sale under his execution,” and the court said that “ this would be consonant with public policy, aud consistent with sound legal principles, provided that, in doing so, no substantial injury be done to the interests of the mortgagee.”

With this limitation upon the right of the sheriff to interfere with the estate and possession of the mortgagee, the doctrine announced in Woodside v. Adams will not be controverted.

But I cannot agree to the proposition that under authority of a ji. fa. or an attachment an officer can wrest personal property from a pledgee, or mortgagee in possession, and withhold it from him until it is sold under the legal process. Such a rule would be contrary to sound principle, and is without authority to support it. The mortgagee is entitled to the possession ; it is an essential part of his estate in the goods, without which he would be unable to exercise the right, with which the law invests him, to sell the property for the satisfaction of his mortgage debt. He has a right, within reason- . able limits, to select the time and place of sale, and to impose the conditions. This may be of vital importance to the recovery of his demand. He can neither be deprived of this right which is vested in him, nor postponed in the enjoyment of it.

The mortgagor could not deprive him of his possession. The sheriff or creditor, who succeeds by operation of law to his rights, can be in no better position than the mortgagor himself. He may take for the satisfaction of the judgment debt the interest of the mortgagor, but he cannot impair the estate of the prior for the benefit of the subsequent creditor.

The right of the sheriff to take the goods from the actual possession of the mortgagee imports the right to maintain and withhold the possession until he is required to sell them by [506]*506the exigency .of his writ. It frequently occurs that a stay of execution is ordered pending further litigation after a levy is, made.

During all this period the mortgagee might be deprived of his possession, while interest upon his debt would accumulate and the value of' his security become impaired. For the consequent injury he would be remediless, if it be conceded that the sheriff may lawfully assert his right to the actual possession.-

A further consequence would be that if, after sale under the-execution, the officer failed to subject the goods to the power of the mortgagee to resume possession, he would be guilty of a tort, for which he alone and not his sureties would be responsible. For the trespass of the officer the bondsmen are not held. The officer might be without pecuniary ability to respond in damages.

The transfer of the title subject to the mortgage by the act of the mortgagor, cannot enlarge his estate, nor can it diminish that previously granted to the mortgagee. Who will assert that such vendee can legally maintain the right to deprive the ■mortgagee of his possession, and how can he who holds under the legal process be on a better footing ? The recognition of this right in the latter would as clearly appropriate the property of the mortgagee to pay the debt of another for which he was in nowise responsible, as would the former.

It is true that there is a line of English cases holding that the interest of one of several partners or joint owners of personal property may be seized and sold under execution, but such partner has an equal right to present possession with all his associates.- Under such sale the purchaser can acquire only the share of the execution debtor in the surplus of the partnership effects, after all the firm obligations are discharged. He becomes tenant in common with the other partners and takes cum, onere.

The English doctriue of the right to levy was recognized in this state in Brown v. Bisnett, 1 Zab. 46, but Mr. Justice Carpenter, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court,. [507]*507took the precaution to say that “ it was not á question as to the mode of levy in such case, and that it was not necessary to settle whether the sheriff may take the joint property out of the hands of the other partners on an attachment against one for his separate debt.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Srodes v. Caven
3 Watts 258 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1834)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 A. 444, 47 N.J.L. 493, 1885 N.J. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-cronan-nj-1885.