Gaar, Scott & Co. v. Lyons

37 S.W. 73, 99 Ky. 672, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 29, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 73 (Gaar, Scott & Co. v. Lyons) 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
Gaar, Scott & Co. v. Lyons, 37 S.W. 73, 99 Ky. 672, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 126 (Ky. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

JUDGE LANDES

delivered tiie opinion of the court.

These two cases were by agreement heard in this court together. The first is an appeal from the judgment of the Hardin Circuit Court, rendered in an action brought by the appellants against the appellee to recover on two notes, foir $200 each, executed by the appellee for a separator, fixtures and appurtenances, which were secured by a mortgage on the same property, a yoke of oxen and a small parcel of land in Breckinridge county, and to subject the mortgaged property to the payment of the notes.

At the commencement of the action a general attachment was sued out by the appellants on the ground that the appellee had no property in the county of Hardin, or in the State of Kentucky, subject to execution, or not enough thereof to satisfy the claims sued on, and that the claims would be endangered by delay in obtaining judgment and return of no property found.

The writ of attachment was placed in the hands of the sheriff, and was levied upon the personal property embraced in the mortgage, which was sold by a special commissioner under an order of the county judge of Hardin county, made upon due notice, at the instance of the appellants, and the sale was duly reported by the commissioner.

It was expressly provided in the mortgage that the appellee might hold and use the personal property in Hardin, Breckinridge and Meade counties.

Without attempting to give in detail all of the steps that were taken in the action, it is sufficient fur the purposes of [677]*677tliis case to say that there was no defense to the action, and that the grounds of the attachment were not controverted, but the court below, on the motion of the appellee, quashed or “discharged the levy” of the attachment, and “set aside the sale of the attached property,” made in pursuance of the order of the county judge above recited, for the reason, as it appears, that the property covered by the mortgage to secure the debt sued on was not subject to and could not be taken under the general attachment sued out in the action.

Afterwards, the case being submitted, the court rendered a judgment in favor of the appellants' for their debt, and subjected the mortgaged personal property, described in the judgment as a “separator, 10,642, on wagon, with folding stacker, belts and usual appurtenances; also one yoke of oxen, about six years old;” and directed that it should be sold for that purpose by a special commissioner appointed in the judgment, and the court, “on its own motion, discharged the attachment herein.” This action of the court discharging the attachment, and the order previously made by the court “discharging the levy and sale” of the same property under the same attai hment, were excepted to by the appellants, and are here urged as error by counsel.

Since under the mortgage, as we have seen, the ai>pellee had the right to retain the possession of and to use the personal property embraced in it, he could not be lawfully deprived of this right before judgment in the action ascertaining the amount the .appellants were entitled to recover, and subjecting the property to the satisfaction of the judgment, except in the manner provided by law.

Undoubtedly the appellants had the right, if proper grounds existed and if it wrere necessary to secure their whole debt, to sue out a general attachment, but we hold [678]*678that the property mortgaged to secure their debt could not be levied on, nor could the appellee be lawfully deprived of the possession or use of it under a general attachment.

Ample provision is made for cases of this kind by section 219 of the Civil Code, which provides that “in an action to enforce a mortgage of or lien upon personal property, . . . if it satisfactorily appear from a verified petition or from affidavits or the proofs in the cause that the plaintiff has a just claim, and that the property is about to be sold, concealed or removed from the State; or if the plaintiff state on. oath that he has reasonable cause to believe, and does believe, that, unless prevented by the court, the property will be sold, concealed or removed from the State, an attachment may be granted against the property.”

The existence of none of the grounds for the specific attachment allowed by this section of the Code were made to appear, and, consequently, no reason was shown why the property should be taken from the possession of appellee at the time the attachment was sued out. The court below, therefore, properly quashed the levy and set aside the sale of this property made under the general attachment; but as the appellants had the right to sue out a general attachment the court erred in discharging the attachment when the ■grounds of it were not controverted and no party in interest had moved for the discharge. The attachment ought to have been sustained. (Civil Code, section 261.)

The appellants, however, have not shown and the record does not discover that their substantial rights were prejudiced by this erroneous action of the court, and the judgment can not, therefore, be reversed on account of it.

The second case was an action in the Hardin Circuit Court, brought by the appellee against the appellants, to recover [679]*679the separator and the yoke of oxen, upon which the attachment in the first case was levied and which were described in the mortgage and judgment in that case, and therein subjected and directed to be sold to pay the appellants’ claim, together with damages for the taking and detention, of said property.

This property, as we have seen,- was taken from the possession of the appellee under the said general attachment, and was sold by order of the county judge, and the levy and-sale discharged and set aside by the court below.

The judgment of the court directing the sale of this property to satisfy the claim of the appellants was rendered on the 6th day of December, 1893, and the action for the recovery of the property and damages for taking and detaining it was commenced on the 6th day of February, 1894. The jury, under what may be termed a peremptory instruction, found a verdict for the appellee, fixing the value of the separator at $275, and the value of the yoke of oxen at $50. or $25 for each ox, and assessed the damages at $180, and the court adjudged that the appellee recover of the appellants the separator and the yoke of oxen, if to be had; and, if not to be had, the value of each, as fixed by the jury, and $180 damages, and costs.

This judgment the appellants moved the court to “set-off” against their judgment rendered against the appellee in the first case, but the attorney for the appellee objected to this motion and asserted his lien on the judgment for his fee in the case, for which he had a written contract.

The court upon hearing these motions, adjudged that “Gaar, Scott & Co., have a prior lien upon the oxen and separator for their judgment against said Lyon, and that” the attorney, “James Montgomery, has, a prior lie-n upon [680]*680tlie $180 adjudged as damages for the amount of his fees agreed to be paid by ÍV. N. Lyon herein adjudged to amount in value for more than said amount of $180.”

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 73, 99 Ky. 672, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaar-scott-co-v-lyons-kyctapp-1896.