Moore v. Brown, Bradbury & Catlett Furniture Co.

32 S.E. 835, 107 Ga. 139, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 835 (Moore v. Brown, Bradbury & Catlett Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Brown, Bradbury & Catlett Furniture Co., 32 S.E. 835, 107 Ga. 139, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 25 (Ga. 1899).

Opinion

Little, J.

The questions arising in this case grow out of a rule for the distribution of money. The rule was brought by the Brown, Bradbury & Catlett Furniture Company against the sheriff, and alleged that a certain fund was in the hands of the sheriff which had been raised by the sale of personal goods levied on by an attachment issued at the instance of the movant, and that movant had recovered a judgment against the defendant and was entitled to have the fund paid over to it. Pending this rule Moore, administrator of Jackson, intervened and set up the fact that he had caused to be levied a distress warrant on the goods, which had been sold by order of the court, and the proceeds were in the hands of the sheriff for distribution ; that the movant had no valid lien upon the goods nor the fund in the hands of the sheriff, because of the fact that the attachment sued out by movant had never been levied on the goods. He traversed the entry of levy of the attachment, and alleged that certain liens of laborers had been foreclosed, and that his lien on the fund was superior to those of the laborers. He waived discovery from all of the parties, and prayed that the court would award him the fund in preference to the movant or the laborers. The court ruled that the affirmative of the issue and the burden of proof was upon Moore, administrator. To this ruling he excepted.

[141]*1411. By section 5160 of the Civil Code it is provided that the burden of proof generally lies upon a party asserting or affirming a fact, and to the existence of whose case the proof of such fact is essential. There was no issue between the original movant, who is the defendant in error here, and the sheriff. The administrator of Jackson, however, intervened; prayed that certain other creditors be made parties to the rule; asserted that his lien was superior to those of the other creditors whom he asked to be made parties, and that in fact the attachment on which the movant had founded its rule had never been levied on the property and consequently had no lien thereon; and prayed that the whole fund should be awarded to him. A rule against the sheriff for the distribution of money is in the nature of an equitable proceeding. The original movant set out in its claim the fact that the money which arose from the sale of the property of the defendant in attachment was in the hands of the sheriff, and asked the court to award it to movant. The facts set forth in the intervention of the plaintiff in error made him the moving party to have the questions raised by his intervention settled by the court. He asserted that the movant, who sought to have the money from the sheriff, in fact had no lien upon it, and brought into the case the other creditors having a claim against the fund, and asserted the priority of his lien over all. Under these circumstances, it would seem that the plaintiff in error was the party moving and raising the issues of law and fact between himself and all the other creditors. We think there was no error on the part of the court in ruling that the affirmative of the issues raised and the burden of proof to support the' same was on the plaintiff in error.

2. The only other question which we consider it is necessary to decide in this case is that of the validity of the levy of the attachment. It seems to be conceded, if what was done under the attachment amounted to a valid levy, that such levy was made prior to the time of the levy on' the same property of the distress warrant which had issued at the instance of the plaintiff in error. So that, if the levy of the attachment was good, then the plaintiff in attachment would be entitled to pri[142]*142ority in payment over the distress warrant; if not good and valid, then the plaintiff in the distress warrant would be entitled to priority over the attachment in the distribution of the fund. If this position is not conceded, then from the pleadings and proof in the record we find that the question turns upon this point. In order"to ascertain whether the levy made by the attachment was valid, it will be best, perhaps, to determine what constitutes a valid levy. In both instances the levies alleged to have been made were upon personal property and the same property, as belonging to the defendant in attachment, who was also the defendant in the distress warrant. It may be said, in the outset, that the statutes of the different .States, in many instances, declare what acts of an officer having possession of proper process constitute a levy on personal property. Freeman, in his work on Executions, vol. 2, § 260, in treating this subject under the principles of the common law, says: “ It is not sufficient that the officer merely makes an inventory of the property and endorses the levy upon his writ. He must go where the property is. He must have it within his view. It must be where he can exercise control •over it. And he must exercise, or assume to exercise, dominion by virtue of his writ. Generally there must be a taking of the property into the possession of the officer, and a divesting of the possession of the owner. The officer must maintain his possession and control to such an extent that the property could not probably be taken from his custody without his knowing it.” There is but one of the conditions embraced in this dictum to which we will call attention, and that is that the officer must have the property within his view. The authorities for this doctrine are a number of cases which are found in note 2. One of these is the case of Taffts v. Manlove, 14 Cal. 47. In that case the officer went to the storehouse to make the levy, the store being closed. He stood at one door and put his companion at the other. No note or memorandum of the levy was made, nor was there any evidence that the officer knew what goods were in the store, or their description or value. These are the acts which it was alleged constituted a levy. It was, •of course, properly ruled that it was, in law', no seizure of the [143]*143property. Another case cited is that of Wood v. Vanarsdale, 3 Rawle, 401. In that case it was held that if the property was within the power and control of the sheriff when the levy was made, it would be good if followed up within a reasonable time by his taking possession in such a manner that others may know that it has been taken in execution. Another case cited is that of Brown v. Pratt, 4 Wis. 512. There the officer attempted to levy upon a quantity of saw-logs which were in different places in a river, for a distance of more than a mile, and some in mill-ponds covered with ice. In fact he was never in the actual possession or control of any of the logs. It was held in that case, that the logs were not all in view of the officer, and that no levy was in fact made. Another case is that of Duncan’s Appeal, 37 Penn. St. 500. It was there ruled that, to constitute a valid levy under an execution, it is essential that the property levied be in the power, or in the view, of the sheriff at the time it was made. In the opinion the court says: “We have departed from the strictness required by the English courts to constitute a levy. We do not require the sheriff in all cases to take actual and exclusive possession of personal property; but it never yet has been held that a levy can be made upon property not in the power or at least in the view of the officer.” The last case which we have examined to support the text referred to, is that of Minturn v. Stryker, 1 Edmonds’ Reports, 356.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 835, 107 Ga. 139, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-brown-bradbury-catlett-furniture-co-ga-1899.