Harris, Tr. v. Max Kohner, Inc.

187 A.2d 97, 230 Md. 349, 1963 Md. LEXIS 525
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1963
Docket[No. 99, September Term, 1962.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 187 A.2d 97 (Harris, Tr. v. Max Kohner, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris, Tr. v. Max Kohner, Inc., 187 A.2d 97, 230 Md. 349, 1963 Md. LEXIS 525 (Md. 1963).

Opinion

Prescott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, allowing Max Kohner, Inc. (Kohner) the sum of $659.29 as a preferred claim.

Although the appellant suggests that there are two questions to be answered, they may conveniently be combined into one, and stated as follows: If the personalty of a debtor be transferred to a trustee under a deed of trust for the benefit of creditors, does a judgment creditor, who has had a writ of fieri facias delivered to the sheriff prior to the assumption of jurisdiction over the debtor’s estate by the court, have a valid lien and a priority on the debtor’s assets, if the levy be made by the sheriff on the same day that the court assumed jurisdiction over the debtor’s estate, and before the return day of the writ?

The facts are not in dispute. Sometime prior to November 28, 1961, Kohner recorded a judgment against one Wiegman, the appellant’s assignor, in the People’s Court of Baltimore City in the amount of $659.29. On that date, Kohner placed a writ of fi. fa. in the hands of the Chief Constable of the People’s Court. On December 1, 1961, a Constable went to levy execution on the property of the judgment debtor, located at 3210 Eastern Avenue. He was met there by the appellant who had been named trustee under a deed of trust for the benefit of Wiegman’s creditors, dated December 1, 1961. The deed of trust, together with a bond, had been filed on that date, and the Circuit Court, Judge Allen presiding, had passed an order *352 assuming “jurisdiction of the estate of David Wiegman.” When the Constable was met by the appellant, the appellant was in the process of taking inventory of the debtor’s property pursuant to his duties as trustee. Upon instructions from the People’s Court, and over appellant’s objection, the Constable made his levy. The debtor’s property was advertised for sale by the trustee, and the parties stipulated that he should make said sale, holding the proceeds thereof subject to subsequent determination by the court as to Kohner’s claimed priority. The sale was made, and, thereafter, Judge Allen passed an order sustaining Kohner’s claim. This appeal followed.

The appellee concedes, as it of course must, that the obtention of judgment, alone, creates no lien upon a judgment debtor’s personal property. Cf. Maryland Rule 620 (September 1958 Ed. in force as of November 28, 1961). In the instant case, however, Kohner had not only secured a judgment, but had also obtained a writ of fieri facias and placed it in the hands of the Chief Constable. At common law, when an execution was issued, it became a lien upon and bound the debtor’s goods by relation from the test-day of the writ. Jones v. Jones, 1 Bland 443, 448. This principle frequently worked hardship upon an innocent purchaser of goods from a judgment-debtor, who bought them in the interval between the teste of the writ and the day on which it was given to the sheriff to be executed. To remedy this, it was enacted in the Statute of Frauds, 29 Ch. 2, Chapter 3, Section 16, “that * * * no Writ of Fieri facias * * * shall bind the Property of the Goods against whom such Writ of Execution is sued forth, but from the Time that such Writ shall be delivered to the Sheriff, Under-Sheriff or Coroners, to be executed: * * *." 2 Alexander’s British Statutes (Coe’s Ed.), 511, 512, 551, 552. This statute is in force in Maryland.

Professor Poe says:

“The meaning and effect of this statute are that until the writ is actually delivered to the sheriff, the defendant may lawfully and validly sell or otherwise dispose of his goods; and his assignee acquiring title in good faith will be protected against the execution- *353 creditor. But after the writ is once delivered to the sheriff, the goods are virtually in the custody of the law, and are made subject to the lien of the execution. Accordingly, an assignee or purchaser from the debtor then buys them at his peril, for it will be the right and the duty of the sheriff to seize and sell them under the fi. fa., notwithstanding the alienation by the judgment-debtor in the interval between the delivery of the writ to the sheriff and the actual levy.”

2 Poe, Pleading and Practice, § 666. Mr. Evans gives practically the same interpretation of the statute at pp. 478 and 479 in his Maryland Practice (1867). And dating the inception of a lien upon a judgment debtor’s personalty from the time a writ of fi. fa. is delivered to the sheriff for execution seems to be the prevailing view throughout this country, although there are a few States, which, usually by statutory enactments, date the inception of the lien from the time the property is seized and not before. 30A Am. Jur., Judgments, § 522; 33 C.J.S., Executions, § 124.

The above statement of Professor Poe should, perhaps, be qualified by adding that the lien on the judgment debtor’s goods attaches only to goods located within the sheriff’s bailiwick. And the delivery of the writ to the sheriff must be made, in good faith, for the purpose of its execution. Myers Co. v. Banking & Trust Co., 170 Md. 198, 183 A. 543. We are not called upon at this time to consider what happens to the writ after its return date.

An unbroken chain of decisions of this Court supports the interpretation given to the statute by Professor Poe and Mr. Evans. Jones v. Jones, supra; Selby v. Magruder, 6 Har. & J. 454; Harris v. Alcock, 10 G. & J. 226, 251; Furlong v. Edwards, 3 Md. 99, 113; Prentiss Co. v. Whitman & Barnes Co., 88 Md. 240, 243, 41 A. 49. See also United States v. Levin, 128 F. Supp. 465 (U.S. D.C., Md., opinion by Thomsen, J.) and In Re Continental Midway Corporation, 185 F. Supp. 867 (U.S. D.C., Md., opinion by Chesnut, J.) both stating Maryland law. And cf. Meyers Co. v. Banking & Trust Co., supra.

In Furlong, this Court stated: “The position assumed by the *354 learned judge who delivered the opinion below, as respects the time when the creditor acquires his lien, is in our judgment erroneous. * * * The case of Harris v. Alcock [supra], in our own court expressly decides, that the issuing and levying of a fieri facias, secures for the creditor a priority or lien upon the debtor’s equitable interest in personal property covered by a mortgage, which lien dates from the time the execution was placed in the officer's hands.”

The Prentiss Co. case, supra, is closely in point here. There, a creditor’s bill was filed against a debtor on February 9, 1894. On February 12th, the appellee secured a judgment against the debtor, and a fi. fa. was issued thereon on February 19th, which was laid in the hands of the sheriff at about 11:30 a.m. on that date. At 1:00 p.m.

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Bluebook (online)
187 A.2d 97, 230 Md. 349, 1963 Md. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-tr-v-max-kohner-inc-md-1963.