Ives v. Beecher

54 A. 207, 75 Conn. 564, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 4, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 54 A. 207 (Ives v. Beecher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ives v. Beecher, 54 A. 207, 75 Conn. 564, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 33 (Colo. 1903).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiffs seek the foreclosure of a judgment lien. The judgment was one against both the defendants herein. The lien was filed upon six separate pieces of property. It is conceded that the defendant Mrs. Beecher owns the three pieces last described in the hen. The defendants deny that she has such an interest in either of the other three pieces as can be taken under a judgment lien. Confessedly she is not the absolute owner of either. Mr. *566 Beecher has no interest in any of the property, save such as he may have as the husband of Mrs. Beecher.

This situation raises preliminary questions as to the validity of the lien in any event. The lien is expressed to be “placed upon the following described real estate ” of the defendants. The defendants contend (1) that the lien is invalid as against the first three pieces, because it does not accurately describe the interest of Mrs. Beecher therein; and (2) that the lien being invalid as to some of the pieces described is therefore invalid as to all. We are pointed to no authority in support of these claims—except such as is attempted to be drawn from an assumed analogy to mechanics’ liens—and we know of none.

Upon the rendition of a judgment the judgment creditor acquires, as against all the debtor’s real estate and alienable beneficial interests therein not exempt from execution, the right to appropriate, if need be, any or all of the same to the satisfaction of the judgment, by such process as the law provides for that purpose. This right of appropriation extends to each parcel of property to the precise extent of the debtor’s interest therein. Prior to 1878 our statutes recognized only one method of enforcing this right: that was by means of a levy of execution. By this process the right, which had before been a general one, became specific as to the property levied upon. The first step of the levy created a specific lien hy means of which the particular property or interest therein was, by the completion of the levy, sequestered to satisfy the judgment. In the creation of this specific lien it still remained, if the levy was sufficiently comprehensive, that it attached, as did the original right, to the precise interest of the debtor in the property, and not to his apparent or supposed interest therein, and the purchaser at the execution sale acquired the debtor’s title or interest, whatever it was in fact. Hitchcock v. Hotchkiss, 1 Conn. 470.

In 1878 the legislature sought to provide another more simple and beneficial process for the enforcement of the general right created by a judgment; hence the legislation which now appears in the Revision of 1902, § 4149 and follow *567 ing. We have heretofore said that this legislation was designed to further the interests of both creditor and debtor, and therefore to be favorably construed to carry out its manifest purpose. Beardsley v. Beecher, 47 Conn. 408 ; Hobbs v. Simmonds, 61 id. 235. It is clear from the purpose and provisions of this Act of 1878 that it was intended not only to furnish a new process but, so far as interests in real estate were concerned, one which was to be coextensive in its application with the existing process. Its object, like that of the process by levy, was to create a specific lien upon specific property, through which any un exempt, alienable, beneficial interest therein which the debtor might have, might be appropriated to satisfy the judgment. It could not reach interests which the debtor did not have. To be efficient it must so. operate as to reach all that he had, whether apparent or not. The legislature was evidently looking for a process which should be at once as effective as the old, and at the same time simple, inexpensive, usable by persons not astute in the law, and not likely to be defeated in its ends through technicalities or exacting requirements. Therefore the absence of any requirement, or suggestion of requirement, that the judgment creditor should, at his peril, be able to know and in fact describe the precise interest of the debtor, in his attempt to convert his general right into a specific enforceable lien by the new process. No such pitfall was prepared. The provisions and requirements of the law enacted were the simplest possible. It was framed upon the simple idea of effectuating the general right as against certain specified property, by means of a recorded certificate, by force of which a specific lien should be created which should attach to that to which the original right attached, to wit, to the debtor’s precise interest, whatever it was, and which could be enforced by foreclosure and the debtor’s interest thus taken. The form of the certificate was prescribed. This form was apparently intended for all situations. It was apparently intended, and the reasons for the intentions are easy to discover, that by virtue of it any interest in lands subject to levy of execution might be reached, and reached without a precise description *568 or general specification of that interest. This intention controls us, as it should, in concluding, as we do, that the plaintiffs’ lien was in form sufficient to enable them by its foreclosure to take whatever interests, subject to levy of execution, the defendants may have had in the several pieces described.

The second contention, that the failure of a judgment lien as to any piece described in it accomplishes a failure as to all, has less merit. The argument sought to be drawn from an analogy to mechanics’ liens wholly falls, since the analogy in its pertinent points does not exist. The maxim, utile per inutile non vitiatur, fully expresses the legal results of the assumed situation. For a case furnishing a closer analogy than those referred to, see Camp v. Smith, 5 Conn. 80.

The first three of the pieces of land described in the lien were owned by Sarah L. Maltby at her death in 1871, she having inherited them from her father. She left a will in which she devised one-fourth part of the real estate left her by her father, to Henry White, in trust and confidence that he would annually pay over the rents, issues, interest and profits thereof to Mrs. Beecher during her natural life. In the distribution the second of the pieces described in the lien was set out to Mr. White under this trust for Mrs. Beecher’s benefit. Mrs. Beecher thus became the cestui que trust of an estate for her life in this piece.

This trust, it will be observed, is not of the kind denominated a spendthrift trust. It is not one by the terms of which the trustee has a discretion as to what shall be paid over to the cestui que trust. The lights of the latter are fixed and definite, and there is no attempt to limit her power of alienation by her voluntary act, or in invitum by her creditors. Mrs. Beecher’s interest is one entirely under her control and alienable by her. Such an equitable estate we have repeatedly held was one which could be subjected to the rights of creditors upon attachment and execution. Davenport v. La eon, 17 Conn. 278; Johnson v. Connecticut Bank, 21 id. 148 ; Bunnell v. Read, ibid. 586 ; Middletown Savings Bank v. Jarvis, 33 id. 372; Smith v. Gilbert, 71 id. 149.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 207, 75 Conn. 564, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ives-v-beecher-conn-1903.