Francis v. Burnett

84 Ky. 23, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 6, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 84 Ky. 23 (Francis v. Burnett) 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
Francis v. Burnett, 84 Ky. 23, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 30 (Ky. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinions

JUDGE LEWIS

DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.

September 3, 1884, Burnett instituted an action against Francis on nine promissory notes, and obtained an attachment against his property for the canses prescribed in subsection 2, section 194, Civil Code, which is as follows:

“In an action for the recovery of money due upon a contract, judgment or award, if the defendant have no property in this State subject to execution, or not [26]*26enough thereof to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand, and the collection of the demand will be endangered by delay in obtaining judgment or a return of no property found.”

There being no defense to the action, personal judgment was rendered by default for the balance due of the notes sued on; but the defendant moved for the discharge of the attachment on the face of the papers, and subsequently filed his affidavit controverting the grounds thereof; and this is an appeal from the judgment overruling his motion and sustaining the attachment.

As there are some preliminary questions raised by counsel which affect the right of the defendant, Francis, to prosecute the appeal, they will be first considered.

1. It appears that September 13, 1884, the defendant conveyed all his estate to James Tuggle, in trust for his creditors generally, and did not have title to the attached property when the ]udgment appealed from was rendered; and it is contended he, for that reason, has no right to complain of the sale of the property attached, and that the judgment did not affect his substantial rights.

It may be true that Tuggle, the assignee, if he had been a party, might have contested the attachment, and resisted judgment for a sale of the attached property. Nevertheless, Francis having been the owner when the attachment was issued and levied, has a right of action against Burnett, not forfeited or waived by the conveyance to Tuggle, but depending upon the final judgment sustaining [27]*27or discharging the attachment, and was consequently a real party in interest on the trial of the attachment, and may prosecute this appeal.

2. A motion for a new trial in the lower court was not necessary in order to bring the judgment sustaining the attachment before this court for revision. The rule of practice referred to by counsel has relation only to trials of actions, and does not apply to the trial of an attachment, which it is specially provided by section 264, Civil Code, shall be tried by the court.

3. Nor does section 332, even if it was susceptible of the construction contended for, at all relate to the trials of provisional remedies. It was not, therefore, necessary in this case for the lower court to state in writing its conclusion of fact and of law separately, in order- to give this court the right to revise the judgment.

The appeal being then properly before us, we will ■consider the several grounds relied on for reversal.

We deem it unnecessary to discuss the constitutionality of the subsection of the Code under which the attachment was obtained, for it has been heretofore passed on by this court, and is not now an open question.

In order to determine whether the attachment was obtained upon sufficient cause, which is the main inquiry, it becomes not only necessary to construe the law, but to refer with some particularity to the notes sued on, and the facts contained in the bill of exceptions as admitted or proved.

Two only of the nine notes, amounting in round [28]*28numbers to one thousand five hundred and six dollars, were executed by Francis alone directly to Burnett. One other, amounting to two hundred and seventy-one dollars, was given by him to J. C. Ramsey, his partner in business, and by the latter assigned to Burnett, making the whole amount for which Francis was individually bound to Burnett when the action was commenced one thousand seven' hundred and seventy-one dollars.

Two of them, amounting to one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five dollars, were executed to Burnett by the firm of Shearer, Francis & Ramsey, and three on the same firm, amounting to about nine hundred dollars, were assigned to him, making the whole amount owed by that firm the sum of two-thousand six hundred and ninety-five dollars.

He also held one on Francis & J. C. Ramsey for one thousand dollars.

The whole amount of the nine notes, each of which fell due, or the accrued interest on each of which was paid up during the year 1884, was about five-thousand three hundred and sixty dollars.

It appears that when the attachment was obtained both Shearer & Ramsey, members of the firm mentioned, were resident citizens of Wayne county, where the action was brought, but neither of them was made a party or sued on the notes for which they were, jointly with Francis, bound.

All the assigned notes were purchased by Burnett at their face value, and transferred to him a few days only prior to the commencement of the action.

It farther appears that Burnett admitted, on the [29]*29trial of the attachment, that he believed, at the time he purchased the notes assigned to him, he had already enough debts against Francis to enable him to obtain the attachment; but he procured the additional notes in order to render it certain that the aggregate of his demands would exceed the value of Francis’ property' subject to execution. And Ramsey testified that Burnett, a short time before bringing the action, informed him of his purpose, and took the note he held on Francis with a verbal agreement between them, that if he collected it by the suit he was about to commence against Francis, he would pay to him, Ramsey, the note given to the latter in consideration of the transfer, otherwise it was to be canceled, and the one sued on returned.

The evidence conduces to show that when the attachment was obtained, property subject to execution was owned by Francis, varying in value from three thousand nine hundred dollars to six thousand dollars, by the firm of Shearer, Francis & Ramsey, of the value of two thousand four hundred dollars, by J. C. Ramsay of about the value of three thousand one hundred dollars, and by Shearer of the value of from four thousand five hundred dollars to five thousand dollars.

Prior to the act of 1870 no attachment was authorized for the causes set forth in the subsection under consideration. And that act, as construed in the case of Jenkins v. Jackson, 8 Bush, 373, authorized merely money, choses in action, and equitable interests to be attached. It was not until the adoption of the present Code, in which was engrafted the sub[30]*30section quoted, that the property generally of the debtor was made subject to attachment for the causes mentioned. It has consequently resulted that the meaning and application of the provision to questions such as are presented in this case have not been determined by this court; the only case where the law, as it now exists, has been considered, being Burdett v. Phillips, 78 Ky., 246, which was unlike this.

Every cause for which an attachment was authorized before the act of 1870 implied some act on the part of the debtor done with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder, and delay his creditors, or which operated to obstruct the service of summons against him. But the causes prescribed in subsection 2 exist not by reason of any act done by the debtor, but on account of his misfortune. Therefore, as said in Jenkins v.

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Bluebook (online)
84 Ky. 23, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francis-v-burnett-kyctapp-1886.