Mooar v. Walker

46 Iowa 164
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 8, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 46 Iowa 164 (Mooar v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mooar v. Walker, 46 Iowa 164 (iowa 1877).

Opinion

Seevers, J.

The attachment process was in the ordinary form and directed the sheriff to attach the property of Walker. The sheriff returned thereon that on the 22d day of June, 1874, he “attached H. G. Boon, secretary of said company, as garnishee, by informing him he ivas attached as garnishee and by leaving with him a written notice,” which is attached to and made a part of the return, and no further attachment of property was made. The notice referred to in the return is directed to II. G. Boon, and he was notified “not to pay any debt due by him to the defendant, or hereafter to become due,” and that he “ must retain possession of all property of said defendant then and thereafter being in his possession or under his control.”

On the 20th day of August, 1874, Walker, by an instrument in writing, transferred the stock to the intervenor, but no transfer of the same was made or the books of the company. It is, however, admitted that the intervenor did all he could to procure such transfer, but that the officers of the gas company refused so to do. At the time the attachment was served on Boon he understood that the “ said stock was being garnished in that proceeding.”

From the foregoing statement it will be seen that two questions are presented: 1. Whether under the attachment proceedings the plaintiff obtained any lien on, or right to, fhe stock; and, 2. Whether the intervenor is a purchaser for value in good faith, and whether it is proper this question should be determined on this appeal. They will be considered in the order stated.

i garnish-stock: attacimient. I. We understand counsel to concede that at common law stock in an incorporated company could not be reached or levied on under either mesne or final process. Sec. 2967 of the Code provides: “Stock or intereg£ owne(j py the defendant in any company, and [167]*167also debts due him or property of his held by third persons, may be attached as follows:

“ 1. By giving the defendant in the action, if found within the county, and also the person occupying or in possession of the property, if it be in the hands of a third person, notice of attachment.

“ 2. If the property is capable of manual delivery the sheriff must take it into his custody, if it can be found.

“8. Stock in a company is attached by notifying the president or other head of the company, of the secretary, cashier, or other managing agent thereof, of the fact that the stock has been so attached.

“4. Debts due the defendant, or property of his held by third persons, and which cannot be found, or the title to which is doubtful, are attached by garnishment thereof.”

It is evident the last mode could not be adopted, because the gas company was not indebted to Walker, nor did it have in its possession any property belonging to him, or that if it was adopted the plaintiff obtained no lien on the stock thereby, nor did he become entitled to a personal judgment against the gas company.

Whenever the attachment by garnishment is proper and is adopted, no lien on property is thereby obtained, but the remedy for the enforcement of the judgment is of a personal character against the garnishee, who may sell and convert to his own use the property in his hands at the time process is served on him, and to such personal liability alone must the creditor look for his payment.

On the other hand, where property is attached otherwise than by garnishment, a lien on the property is obtained, and the same cannot be sold or transferred free from or unaffected by the lien, and to such property and the debtor must the-creditor look for the payment, of his claim. . In such proceeding no personal judgment can be obtained against any third person.

The fact that the gas company had in its possession the stock book which showed that Walker owned stock therein by no means gave the company or its officers possession or con-' [168]*168trol of the stock. The stock in a legal sense was in the possession of Walker; he alone could sell or transfer it. The stock books did not give the company power and dominion over the stock except for its own protection, and not to enable it to arbitrarily injure one person so as to benefit another. The stock books constituted evidence of Walker’s title, but were not by any means the only evidence of his ownership, and the refusal to transfer could not have any effect on either the title of Walker or the intervenor.

In order to obtain a lien on stock in an incorporated company and prevent a valid transfer of the same, the creditor must follow the mode pointed out in the third sub-division of said Sec. 2967, which requires that notice shall be served on the president or other head of the company, or the secretary, cashier, or other managing agent thereof of the fact that the stoclc has been attached, and this mode has not been adopted in the present case.

The notice served on Boon did not inform him that the stock was attached; beside this, it was directed to him as an individual, and required him in such capacity not to pay any debt due by him to Walker, and that he must retain possession of all property under his control belonging to said Walker.

The return of the sheriff on attachment aids the conclusion that no attachment of property was made or intended as distinguished from garnishment; for the sheriff states that he attached Boon as garnishee.

Boon’s understanding that there was an attachment of the stock cannot change this result. If there was a valid attachment and lien on the stock created by the proceedings, both Walker and the intervenor were bound to take notice thereof, and any sale or transfer by the former to the latter thereafter could in no manner affect or displace the lien, but any right or title obtained by the intervenor would be subject thereto. But the intervenor was not bound to know or take notice of Boon’s understanding of what rights the plaintiff obtained under the attachment proceedings.

This is not a contest in which the gas company has any interest of a personal character, therefore Sec. 1078 of the [169]*169Code has no application. That section is intended as a protection to the company, and is designed to apply only where the sale or transfer of the stock in some way conflicts with the interests of the corporation. If Walker had been indebted to the company, that section would have had an important bearing on the rights of the parties to the extent of such indebtedness. That a transfer is valid between the parties is expressly recognized by said section. We are therefore of the opinion that no lien was created on the stock, and that the intervenor obtained a valid title thereto unless the .same is affected by fraud as alleged in the pleadings.

II. A part of the stock in question was by the court below adjudged to belong to a third party, and as to the correctness of such adjudication no question is made in this court.

“As to the residue,it was adjudged that the plaintiff’s attach-: ment herein be sustained,” and it was ordered that a special execution issue for the sale of the stock. The plaintiff insists that his answer to the petition of intervention asked affirmativé relief, and alleged the transfer of the stock to be fraudulent and void, and he further insists that this cause is not triable de novo

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Bluebook (online)
46 Iowa 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mooar-v-walker-iowa-1877.