Huxley v. Harrold

62 Mo. 516
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 62 Mo. 516 (Huxley v. Harrold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huxley v. Harrold, 62 Mo. 516 (Mo. 1876).

Opinion

Sherwood, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ejectment for land in Andrew county. Conrad Hartzell is the common acource of title. Plaintiff claims under a sheriff’s deed, based on an attachment proceeding instituted by himself against Hartzell in the Buchanan Common Pleas on the 18th of March, 1861. This deed bears date December 12th, 1872, and recites a general jndgment recovered by Huxley against Hartzell, in the Buchanan circuit court, May 21st, 1872, and execution issued thereon, October the 3rd. of that year, and a sale thereunder to plaintiff on the 7th of December next thereafter. Plaintiff at the trial produced evidence tending to show title from the United States to one Wykoff, and from the latter to Hartzell by deed delivered in May, 1866, when $800, the remaining purchase money, was paid. Hartzell, having in 1861 paid $1000, received a title bond and entered into possession of the premises in controversy.

The defendant, who is the tenant of one Cole, introduced evidence having a tendency to show title in the latter, by means of a mortgage deed dated in June. 1870, executed by Hartzell to Wells, a sale under the power contained in the mortgage, and a deed made by Wells to Nelson, in execution of che power, in January, 1872, a deed from the latter, in the same month, to one John Cole, and a deed from the latter, made in April, 1872, to L. Q-. A. Cole, the landlord of defendant. Evidence was also introduced, tending to show good’faith and no-knowledge by either Wells, Nelson, or the Coles, of any incumbrance, or attachment lien, on the premises in dispute.

The cause was tried by the court, without a jury; no declarations of law were asked, and the finding was for the plaintiff. This case therefore depends solely upon the sufficiency of the attachment proceedings instituted against Hartzell.

[520]*520I.

Prior to the act approved,. February 11, 1861 (Sess. Acts, 1863-1, p. Y), which went into effect April 1st of that year, the sheriff, who levied, a writ of attachment sent from another county, was not required to file an abstract of his levy in the recorder’s office. • This being the ease, and the attachment writ, under which plaintiff’s claims, having been, as the evidence shows, levied on the 18th of March, 1861, there was no necessity for filing an abstract in the office of the recorder ; as, if filed, it would have been a mere nugatory act, and imparted notice to no one. For this reason, the non-filing of an abstract of the attachment levy cannot be held to have impaired the rights or lien acquired by such levy.

II.

Nor can the validity of the levy be affected by the failure of the sheriff’s return to recite notice to tenants of the land, or. by failure to state there were no tenants. The statutory notice to tenants is not simultaneous with the act oflevying the writ, and cannot, therefore, be regarded as constituting a part of the levy. (Lackey vs. Seibert, 23 Mo., 85; Durossett’s Adm’r vs. Hale, 38 Mo., 316.)

III.

As Hartzell, if not served with personal process, appeared' to, and defended, the action, a general judgment was the only one authorized by the statute. (Wagn. Stat., 189, §40.) In consequence of this statutory requirement, it was wholly unnecessary for the judgment to recite any attachment lien in order to impart additional efficacy to that lien. And the status of the case was not altered, as has been suggested, by reason of the land being in another county.

IT.

The sheriff’s deed to plaintiff was regular on its face, and was therefore prima facie evidence of the truth of the recitals which it contained (McCormick vs. Fitzmorris, 39 Mo., 21; Ellis vs. Jones, 51 Mo., 180). And it was quite immaterial that the deed went further, and made recital of the date and levy of the writ of attachment, as this fact was esrab[521]*521lished by the officer’s return. And no valid objection can be urged to the certificate of acknowledgment to that deed. It recites, that, “on the 12th day of December, 1875, before the judge of the circuit court within and for the county of Andrew aforesaid, in court judicially sitting, appeared,” etc. (McClure vs. McClurg, 53 Mo., 173.)

v.

It is well settled in this State, that the levyof a writ of attachment, when properly issued, creates a valid charge or lien on the land against all persons from the moment of the levy, so that a sale upon the execution relates to that time, and passes the title to the purchaser divested and discharged of all subsequent incumbrances made by the debtor. (Lackey vs. Seibert, supra; Ensworth vs. King, 50 Mo., 477.)

And the result is the same whether the debtor possesses a legal or an equitable interest in the land at the time of levy made. For under our law, the latter, as well as the former, class of interests are attachable. (Wagn. Stat., 184, §18.)

And in the case at bar, Hartzell’s equitable interest having, because of his paying the residue of the purchase money and receiving a deed, ripened into a perfect legal title, such legal title would inure to the benefit of- whomsoever became the purchaser at judicial sale.

The case before us does not require, and therefore we shall refrain from, the discussion of the question, as to what the effect would have been, had Hartzell mortgaged the land prior to the acquisition of the legal title, and had, subsequent to that incumbrance, made such acquisition by the payment of the remaining purchase money and the reception of a deed.

’ VI.

The last point remaining to be discussed is a jurisdictional one. It is alleged, on behalf of plaintiff, that Hartzell, who, it seems, at the time resided in Buchanan county, was possessed of personal property there, which was levied on also under a writ of attachment directed to that county.

[522]*522It is tacitly conceded on the part of defendant that this was the case, though a very patient search through this most wretched record fails to disclose anything indicative of the truth of the assertion ; but it is insisted, that unless Hartzell had real property in Buchanan county, which was also attached, the court acquired no jurisdiction over that in Andrew county, and we are referred in support of this position to R. S. 1855, p. 1221, §§ 2, 8, which provide, that suits, commenced by attachment against the property of a person, shall be brought in the county where “ such property” may be found, and that “suits concerning real estate, or whereby the same may be affected, shall be brought in the county where such real estate or some part thereof, is situated.” The latter section evidently has no reference to attachment suits (which do not directly concern or affect real estate); but applies to suits in equity, ejectment and the like. And in the provisions of section 2, supra, are embraced all descriptions of property real or personal; and these provisions of this section are in conformity with those of § 20, Art. 1, chap. 12 of the Attachment Act (1 R. S. 1855, p. 244), which provides, that when the defendant “has property or effects” in different counties, that “separate writs may issue to every such county.” It will be readily seen from an examination of the provisions of §§ 2 and 20, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
62 Mo. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huxley-v-harrold-mo-1876.