In Re Stevenson's Estate

289 P. 566, 87 Mont. 486, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 99
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1930
DocketNo. 6,617.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 289 P. 566 (In Re Stevenson's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Stevenson's Estate, 289 P. 566, 87 Mont. 486, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 99 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by Nat Taylor from an order made in the matter of the estate of Claire S. Stevenson, deceased, wherein the district court of Cascade county preferred the claim of Smith & Eickemeyer over that of Taylor.

On April 16, 1927, Smith & Eickemeyer brought suit against Claire S. Stevenson to recover the sum of $4,500 and in the suit procured the issuance of a writ of attachment which on that day was duly levied upon real property of the *490 defendant in Cascade county. The suit had not proceeded to judgment when the defendant died. Taylor had obtained a deficiency judgment in the sum of $1,500 against Claire S. Stevenson in Toole county. On June 7, 1927, Taylor filed a transcript of his Toole county judgment in the office of the clerk of the district court of Cascade county.

On August 31, 1927, Claire S. Stevenson died. Her estate was probated in Cascade county, Frank B. Brown being appointed administrator. In due time Smith & Eickemeyer presented to the administrator their claim for $4,500, asking its allowance as a preferred and secured claim, based upon the attachment. The claim was compromised for $3,500, and in that sum was allowed and approved by the administrator and the district judge.

In due time Taylor presented his claim for the sum of $1,500, based upon his deficiency judgment, asking for the allowance thereof as a secured and preferred claim. It was allowed by the administrator and the district judge.

Prior to the attachment thereon decedent had mortgaged the land to Charles J. Hops. The land was sold by th.e administrator for $10,600, and after paying the amount due upon the mortgage there remained to the credit of the administrator from the proceeds of the sale the sum of $2,768.78.

On June 22, 1929, the administrator filed his first account, in which he stated that in his opinion Smith & Eickemeyer were entitled to this sum of money and that the remainder due them, and all other claims except those for funeral expenses, expenses of last sickness, and expenses of administration, should be paid pro rata. The estate was found to be the owner of certain personal property but not sufficient in amount to pay its debts in full.

Taylor filed objections to the account, asserting that his claim was entitled to preference over that of Smith & Eiekemeyer and by reason thereof he was entitled to the surplus from the proceeds of the sale of the land, but alleging that if it be decided by the court that the claim of Smith & Eiekemeyer is a preferred claim, the two preferred claims should *491 be paid ratably, neither having priority over the other. Upon the hearing the court adjudged that Smith & Eiekemeyer’s claim was superior to that of Taylor, and that as Taylor’s claim could not be satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale of the real estate, it ceased to be a lien.

The determinative question is whether the Smith & Eiekemeyer attachment has precedence over the lien of Taylor’s judgment.

1. At the outset counsel for Taylor say the attachment levy did not in fact create a lien upon decedent’s real estate. As we shall see, this position cannot be maintained. While the origin of the remedy of attachment is of great antiquity in the English law, the right to and operation'of the remedy is regulated wholly by statute in this country as well as in England. “The avowed principle which lies at the basis of all these enactments,” says the author of the note appended to President etc. of Franklin Bank v. Bachelder (23 Me. 60), 39 Am. Dec. 601, 607, “Is that of affording to a creditor a certain and speedy remedy for the satisfaction of his demand out of the property attached, contingent, however, upon the fact of his recovering judgment in the action in which the attachment is issued. The fact that rights created by an attachment are not absolute, but until the recovery of judgment are contingent and provisional, has induced some writers to be of the opinion that before judgment there is no such thing as an attachment lien: See the opinion of Judge Story in Ex parte Foster [Fed. Cas. No. 4960], 2 Story, 131. This opinion has been controverted by the weight of authority: See notes to Jackson v. Ramsey, 15 Am. Dec. 253; Fettyplace v. Dutch, 23 Am. Dec. 688; Carter v. Champion, 21 Am. Dec. 695.”

The design of our law seems to be to afford the creditor upon the statutory conditions a security for every demand not otherwise secured arising upon contract for the direct payment of money in which there has been a default in payment, as Judge Sawyer put it. Continuing, he said: “Security to the vigilant seems to be the leading idea upon which *492 the law is framed. The moment the attachment is levied, a lien upon the property attached is acquired. The lien becomes specific, and the party acquires a right to have any amount that may be found due upon the contract satisfied out of his specific property. It is a right vested upon the conditions prescribed by the statute. * * * It is true that the attachment lien can only be made available through a judgment of some sort. But this is ordinarily equally true of a lien by mortgage, or a mechanic’s lien. * * * Mechanics’ liens for the construction of buildings; for the manufacture or repair of articles of personal property; innkeepers’ and carriers’ liens, and the like, are as much liens in invitum, imposed by law independent of conventional stipulation, as liens by attachment, and, when the right has once attached, the latter are no less sacred, and no more without the pale of legal remedy than the former.” (Dissenting opinion in Myers v. Mott, 29 Cal. 359, 375, 89 Am. Dec. 49. And see Hawley v. Isaacson, 117 Wash. 197, 21 A. L. R. 268, 200 Pac. 1109.)

The levy of an attachment upon lands constitutes a specific, albeit an inchoate, lien thereon. If the plaintiff obtains judgment, the lien is thereby perfected, relates back to the time of the levy, and cuts off intervening encumbrances. (Frellson v. Green, 19 Ark. 376.) Moreover, our statute recognizes the levy of an attachment as a lien. (Sec. 9274, Rev. Codes 1921.)

2. The next question is: Does the death of the defendant after the levy, and before judgment in the action to which the attachment proceeding is ancillary, dissolve the attachment, or at least render it unenforceable?

Counsel for Taylor, with earnestness and ability, argue that in view of the condition of our statutes, and prior decisions, the question must be answered in the affirmative. Special reliance is placed upon the majority opinion in Myers v. Mott, supra. With respect to that case we think the dissenting opinions are grounded upon sounder reasoning than is the majority opinion and the conclusion of the dissenters is in *493 accord with justice and with the spirit as well as the letter of our statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
289 P. 566, 87 Mont. 486, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stevensons-estate-mont-1930.