Gusdorf & Co. v. Ikelheimer & Co.

75 Ala. 148
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 Ala. 148 (Gusdorf & Co. v. Ikelheimer & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gusdorf & Co. v. Ikelheimer & Co., 75 Ala. 148 (Ala. 1883).

Opinion

BRICKELL, 0. J.

The appellants, Gusdorf & Co., were judgment creditors of Solomon Lehman, and caused an execution issuing upon their judgment to be levied upon personal property of value sufficient to satisfy it. At the time of the judgment and levy, they had also dioses in action transferred to them by the judgment debtor, as collateral security for their debt. The appellees were general creditors of Lehman, and, on the day succeeding the levy of the execution, they caused an attachment to issue, which was levied upon the same personal property on which the execution was levied. The attachment suit was duly and successfully prosecuted to judgment in favor of the appellees. The personal property was, or the proceeds of sales were more than sufficient to satisfy the execution of Gusdorf & Co., and were by the sheriff applied to its satisfaction. Before this application of the proceeds of sales was made, Gusdorf & Co. had made collection of the collaterals to the amount, as alleged in the original bill, of seven hundred and forty-three 41-100 dollars, which yet remains in their hands; and the purpose of the original bill is to compel them to apply that sum in satisfaction of their execution, exonerating the proceeds of the sales of the property to that extent from liability to the execution, for the .benefit of the appellees, and the satisfaction of their junior lien. This, of course, involves a decree compelling them to pay that sum to the appellees. The equities of the appellees and of Gusdorf & Co., upon this state of facts, we first propose to consider.

The general principle, upon which the equity of the bill 'is founded, is, that if one creditor has alien upon, or interest in, or the security of two funds for a debt, and another creditor of the same debtor has a lien upon, or interest in, or the security of one only of the funds for another debt, the latter has the right in equity and good conscience to compel the former first to resort for satisfaction to the fund on which he alone has the lien, interest, or security, if that course is necessary for the satisfaction of both debts, whenever it will 'not trench upon his rights, or operate to his prejudice.—1 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 633; Nelson v. Dunn, 15 Ala. 501; Chapman v. Hamilton, 19 Ala. 121. “ The nature of the property which constitutes the double fund does not affect the operation of the principle; and it applies whenever a paramount creditor holds collateral security, or can resort collaterally to other real or personal property for' the satisfaction of the debt.”—2 Lead. Eq. Cases (Part l), 262. In DePeyster v. Hildreth, 2 Barb. Ch. 109, a creditor had a judgment which was a lien upon real estate, and upon which execution had issued and was levied upon personal property sufficient for the payment of the judgment; and it was held, he was bound to exhaust the levy, in exoneration of the real estate for [154]*154the relief of mortgagees taking a mortgage subsequently to the judgment. And in Ingalls v. Morgan, 6 Selden (10 N. Y.), 178, a judgment creditor having a lien on real estate which was sold by the debtor, and notes for the purchase-money taken and transferred to the creditor, it was held he was bound to collect and apply the notes in satisfaction of the judgment. Without losing all recourse upon the lands in the hands of a subsequent purchaser, he could not surrender the notes to the debtor from whom he received them. The court said : “ The facts present a case where the creditor has a lien upon two funds for the security of his debt, and another party has an interest in one only of these funds, without any right to resort to the other. In such a case, equity will compel the creditor to take his satisfaction out of the fund upon which he alone has an interest, so that both parties may, if possible, escape without injury.” There are numerous cases to be found in the books in which a court of equity has intervened and applied this doctrine, without inquiry or distinction whether the property constituting the two funds or securities was of the same nature; whether the one was real, and the other personal; or, if both were personal, whether the one was visible, tangible, capable of actual possession, and the other a ehose resting in action. Tiie distinction can only be made, when a necessity for it may be shown to exist, to prevent the operation of the principle from working to the prejudice of the paramount creditor.—Goss v. Lester, 1 Wisconsin 51. The whole foundation of the principle, it is said, is the natural equity and benevolence which requires every one to exercise his rights, so far as he can without inconvenience to himself, in a way that will avoid causing loss to others. — 1 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 633.

An attachment is a statutory process; and its purpose is, that the jurisdiction of the court, in the ulterior proceedings, may be the more effectual, and that, security for the judgment obtained may be afforded to the plaintiff. From the da}' it is made, the levy creates a lien, taking precedence of all subsequent alienations, or of subsequent incumbrances, made or created by the debtor, and of subsequent liens acquired by other creditors by the operation of law, or of legal process. The lien, it is true, is, primarily, incipient, inchoate, and conditional, operating only on the particular property which is the subject of the levy, and will be -defeated if judgment is not obtained, upon which process can issue for the subjection of the property to sale. And it is, of consequence, as is insisted by counsel, less stringent, frailer,and more uncertain than the lien of an execution.—Phillips v. Ash, 63 Ala. 414. But that the lien is of statutory derivation, and the mode of its enforcement is prescribed by statute,is not of itself an objection [155]*155to compelling a creditor having prior liens so to use them, that the attaching creditor, after'he has obtained judgment, shall not be defeated. Beal estate is by statute subjected to the satisfaction of legal process, and liens of judgments or executions operating upon it are derived wholly from statutes declaring them. A court of equity, in this country, does not more often exercise its jurisdiction to marshal • assets, and in the exercise of the jurisdiction compelling creditors or others to exhaust funds or securities -to which they alone can resort, than in the exoneration of lands for the benefit of creditors having liens upon them by judgment, or by execution derived from statute. The existence of the jurisdiction, and the propriety of its exercise, have not been questioned. A mechanic’s lien is the creature of statute, and yet, in the application of this doctrine, it has been regarded as standing upon equal ground with a mortgage, affecting to the same extent legal and equitable rights.—Hamilton v. Schwehr, 34 Md. 108 ; Kenny v. Gage, 33 Vt. 302. Whether the court would intervene to marshal assets, and to apply this doctrine, at the instance of an attaching creditor, before lie had by judgment perfected the lien of the attachment; or whether, in such case, intervention would not be limited to a preservation of things and of the rights of the parties in statu- quo, if it could be done without injustice to the prior creditor, is not a question now arising. The appellees had perfected their lien by judgment before exhibiting the bill.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ala. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gusdorf-co-v-ikelheimer-co-ala-1883.