Goodbar v. Brooks

22 S.W. 96, 57 Ark. 450, 1893 Ark. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 25, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 96 (Goodbar v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodbar v. Brooks, 22 S.W. 96, 57 Ark. 450, 1893 Ark. LEXIS 112 (Ark. 1893).

Opinion

MansBIERD, J.

At the time of the action taken by the marshal under the order of attachment issued by the Federal court, the goods on which he souglit to levy were held by the sheriff by virtue of an attachment sued out of the Crawford circuit court. They were therefore in the custody of the law, and could not be subjected to a second attachment if it operated to disturb the sheriff’s possession. This being so, the appellants contend that the marshal could not make a valid levy, for the reason, as they insist, that a seizure of the goods was essential to such a levy, and this would necessarily have withdrawn them from the possession of the sheriff.

A section of the Arkansas code directs that the officer executing an order of attachment upon personal property, capable of manual delivery, shall do so “by taking it into his custody and holding it subject to the order of the court.” Mansf. Dig. sec. 320. This provision by its terms requires an actual seizure of the property. But that it applies only to a first attachment is apparent from the provisions found in other sections of the code. One of these is that “where there are several orders of attachment against the same defendant, they shall be executed in the order in which they were received by the sheriff or other officer.” Mansf. Dig. sec. 319. By another section it is provided that ‘ ‘ where several attachments are executed on the same property, the court, on the motion of any one of the attaching plaintiffs, may order a reference to a commissioner to ascertain and report the amounts and priorities of the several attachments.” Mansf. Dig. sec. 359. A further provision of the code is that where the attachments pending in the circuit court and in the inferior courts of a county have been levied upon the same property in whole or in part, it shall be the duty of either of such courts upon motion to make an order for the removal of the actions pending in the inferior court to the circuit court for trial in the latter court as if originally brought there. Mansf. Dig. sec. 386. The next succeeding section of the same statute provides for the removal of actions in which attachments are pending and have been levied on the same property, by change of venue, so as to have them all on the same docket and under the control of the same court, when this appears to be necessary for the proper distribution of the attached property and the adjustment of the rights of the parties. Mansf. Digest, sec. 387. Other sections contain provisions under which “ any person may, before the sale of any attached property, or before the payment to the plaintiff of the proceeds thereof,” present his complaint to the court stating a lien on the property acquired by a different attachment ; and on proof of such lien it is made the duty of the court to ‘ ‘ make such order as may be necessary to protect his rights.” Mansf. Dig. secs. 356, 358.

The application of the section from which our second quotation is made (Mansf. Dig. sec. 319) is clearly confined to orders of attachment executed by the same officer upon the same property ; and although the officer cannot, except in a constructive sense, seize goods of which he already has the actual possession, the statute treats a second or subsequent levy when thus made as of equal validity with the first. Claflin v. Furstenheim, 49 Ark. 302. All the other provisions to which we have referred, except that embraced in section 320 of Mansfield’s Digest, also contemplate successive levies upon the same property ; and yet it is plain that such levies cannot in all cases be made by the officer executing the first attachment. Thus for instance while an attachment issued by a justice of the peace may always, under our statutes, be served by a sheriff, a constable cannot, unless the offices of sheriff and coroner are both vacant, or those officers are defendants or interested in, a suit, execute an attachment issued by the circuit court. Mansf. Dig. secs. 4037, 606, 607. An attachment issuing from the circuit court against property in the custody of the constable under a prior attachment from a justice’s court must therefore usually be levied by the sheriff, or not be levied at all; and his levy could not-of course be made by an actual seizure. Another case may occur in which a constructive levy by an officer not having the custody of the property to be attached would be equally necessary to a just administration of the law. Ordinarily an attachment can only be served within the territorial jurisdiction of the court which issues it; and when the property on which it is to be levied is out of the county where it is issued, the writ will go to the sheriff of the county where the property is found. Mansf. Dig. sec. 314. But a section of the code provides that if, after an order of attachment is placed in the hands of a sheriff, any property of the defendant is removed from the county, the sheriff may pursue and attach the same in another county within twenty four hours after its removal. Mansf. Dig. sec. 326. And we cannot think the law intends that the sheriff’s pursuit shall prove fruitless whenever the property, before he reaches it, is seized by another officer, although the latter takes it under an attachment which it will more than satisfy. In such case if the pursuing sheriff cannot make a constructive levy, it is easy to see that the creditor he represents may be placed at such disadvantage as will often result in the loss of his debt.

In a case arising under statutory provisions substantially like those we are considering-, the Supreme Court of Missouri has held that “successive writs of attachment in the hands of different officers may be levied on the same goods.” Patterson v. Stephenson, 77 Mo. 329. In that case a constable had levied upon Stephenson’s g-oods under an attachment obtained from a justice of the peace. Subsequently Patterson sued out an attachment in the circuit court, and the sheriff executed it upon the goods, subject to the constable’s levy and without disturbing the latter’s possession. In adjudging the sheriff’s levy to be a valid one, the court said : “ On principle and reason the validity of successive levies by the same officers oil the same property is a recognition of the practical fact that there may be, after a taking into the custody of the law the property of the debtor, an effectual imposition of another writ without an actual caption, or a taking away of the property or an appropriation of it for the time being to the attaching creditor’s claim. * * * If the rule which prevents one officer from levying on goods seized by another officer, rests mainly on the prevention of conflict of jurisdiction and the interference of one officer with the prior custodianship of another, then * * * I can see no reason for the operation or recognition of the rule, where the second levy does not produce such conflict or interference. For it must be borne in mind that the other requirement of the law, that the levying of an attachment is an actual seizure of the property, is satisfied in the case of successive levies by the same officer, by a constructive application of the succeeding writ to the surplus after satisfying the previous attachment. ’ ’

A similar view of the doctrine of constructive levies was taken by the Federal court under whose process the levy in question here was made; and the opinion of that court in denying a motion to quash the levy justifies the conclusion that, under the attachment law of this State, it was sufficient to create a lien subject to the prior attachment executed by the sheriff. See Brooks v. Fry, 45 Fed. Rep. 776.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 96, 57 Ark. 450, 1893 Ark. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodbar-v-brooks-ark-1893.