Montgomery v. McDermott

99 F. 502, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5037
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 7, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 F. 502 (Montgomery v. McDermott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. McDermott, 99 F. 502, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5037 (circtsdny 1900).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

This controversy has been before the court on two prior occasions. First on demurrer (83 Fed. 576), and second, on plea. 87 Fed. 372. In the first instance the hill was sustained as being in aid of a suit at law in which an attachment had issued, hut in which no relief was possible because of the death of the defendant and the failure of his foreign executors to revive. In the second instance a plea of res judicata was allowed. A motion for a reargument was made and denied. That the decision sustaining the plea is controlling upon this court until reversed is axiomatic. There is no exception to the rule; it lies at the threshold of an orderly and consistent administration of justice. This court having decided that: the questions determined by the state court in Perkins et al. v. Montgomery et al. cannot again be litigated, it becomes important to ascertain wliat: those questions were. The action was brought by Perkins and Fowler, as trustees, against Montgomery, Dunning, the sheriff of New York and the United States marshal. The defendants Montgomery and Dunning, who are parties to this action, demurred and the demurrers were sustained, the court holding that the suit could not he maintained for the reason that the complaint failed to show a valid lien upon the property alleged to be covered by the attachment. The court decided the following propositions: First. An action of interpleader can only be sustained where a reasonable doubt exists as to which of the claimants is entitled to the fund. Second. The suggestion that the deed of trust is invalid is without color of support. Third. The principal contention of Montgomery namely, that the transfers made by McHenry and his grantee were colorable and voidable as against creditors and that Woodman, the last transferee, held the certificates in reality for the benefit of McHenry wlio had an interest therein which was subject to the lien of the attachments, is without reasonable foundation. Fourth. The attachments were not levied until 12 years after the legal title to the certificates had passed from McHenry to others. McHenry had no title and there was nothing on which the attachment could operate. Fifth. Conceding that the transfer was made for the purpose of defrauding creditors this would afford a good ground for a judgment creditor’s action but not for an attachment. Sixth. Neither the sheriff, the marshal nor the attaching creditors could bring any suit in aid of the attachment challenging the validity of these transfers, and an action of interpleader, which involves the trial of such an issue between the defendants, cannot be sustained. Seventh. Montgomery acquired no lien upon the interest sought to be attached and, therefore, none upon the fund in question. His contention is without reasonable foundation; he has no claim upon the trustees. Upon this decision judgment was entered, the court finding the following conclusions of law:

“(1) That the amended complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of aeiion, inasmuch as it docs not show that the defendant Montgomery acquired any lien upon the fund in controversy in this action under the altachments referred to in said amended complaint therein, or either of them. (2) That the defendants Montgomery and William F. Funning are entitled to an interlocutory judgment which shall adjudge that their respective demurrers are sustained with costs.”

[504]*504The defendant Dunning, who, as before stated, was a party to theinterpleader suit, joins with his answer a plea of res judicata based upon the decision in that suit as follows:

“And this defendant avers that by reason of the proceedings and judgment aforesaid the complainant herein is barred and estopped from bringing and maintaining any suit or action whatever upon the grounds set forth in his bill of complaint herein, and that as to the matters and things therein alleged and the relief therein demanded the said complainant is concluded by the said judgment.”

Of course, this plea must be sustained upon the authority of the former decision of this court. It is of no moment that Montgomery and Dunning were both defendants in the interpleader suit; their interests were conflicting and the judgment is as conclusive as if rendered in a suit in which they held the relation of plaintiff and defendant. Corcoran v. Canal Co., 94 U. S. 741, 24 L. Ed. 190; Leavitt v. Wolcott, 95 N. Y. 212, 222. The theory of the bill is that it can be maintained as ancillary to the action at law to enable the complainant to preserve and enforce the lien of the attachment which otherwise would be lost. The(bill avers:

“Your orator is advised that he requires the aid of this court as a court of equity in order to enable him to avail himself of the benefit of the said attachment to enforce the lien thereof, and appropriate the property attached to the payment of the said debts when the amount thereof shall be ascertained.”

If no attachment had been issued in the action at law it is manifest that there would be nothing on which to base the action in equity. It is only because of the lien alleged to have been acquired that the aid of equity is invoked. If the complainant had no lien there is nothing for equity to aid. The mere fact that an attachment issued is of no consequence unless it fastened itself upon some property of the defendant and impounded it so that the plaintiff could reach it if he obtained a judgment. The state court has decided that the attachment was inoperative in that it gave the complainant no lien, and this court has decided that none of the parties to the action in the state court can relitigate that question. As to them it is a closed book, the estoppel is complete.

It is urged that the interpleader suit was collusive and fraudulent. It is unnecessary to decide whether this question can be litigated in the present action and, if so, to what extent, for the reason that the court is, of the opinion that the charge is without foundation in fact. The suggestion of an interpleader seems to have come -in the first instance from the attorneys for the complainant. In a letter, dated December 8, 1894, they write to the trustees:

“It seemed obvious to us that you, as trustees, would not be willing to pay the money to any one until you were protected by the order of some court of' competent jurisdiction. Such an order, it seemed to us, might be obtained in various modes of proceeding. Thus you might begin an action of inter-pleader and pay the money into court.”

There is no pretense that any fact bearing upon the issue was withheld from the state court or misrepresented in the pleadings. The claim of the complainant was fairly stated and was, indeed, the identical claim alleged in the present bill. A proposition to pay money into,court in Yew York can hardly be regarded as proof of [505]*505a plot to smuggle the money into the hands of a favored creditor in bondon. How, in these circumstances, it is possible to disregard the judgment of the state court on the theory that it was obtained by fraud is beyond the power of this court to comprehend. It follows, therefore, that by virtue of the judgment in the interpleader suit and the decision of the court holding that judgment to be res judical a, the complainant is estopped from asserting, as against the defendants Perkins, Fowler and Dunning, that he obtained a lien by virtue of his attachment. As to them there was no lien and, therefore, no basis for an ancillary suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 F. 502, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-mcdermott-circtsdny-1900.