Morse v. Sleeper

58 Me. 329
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 Me. 329 (Morse v. Sleeper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse v. Sleeper, 58 Me. 329 (Me. 1870).

Opinion

Barrows, J.

Both parties claim the premises here demanded, under conveyances from different levying creditors of Elisha Brown.

The demandant insists that his title originates with and dates from an attachment of Brown’s real estate which Samuel F. Morse & Co. caused to be made Dec. 15, 1855, upon a writ on which final judgment in their favor was rendered at the October term, 1862, and followed by a seasonable levy.

As the tenant claims under levies made subsequent to this attachment, though prior to the levy under it, its validity becomes a matter of importance in considering the plaintiff’s title. Of the various objections alleged against it, — some of them plainly hypercritical and untenable, — one only need be considered.

The officer is commanded in the writ to attach Brown’s goods or estate to the value of $500, and the ad damnum is fixed at that sum; but the case stood continued for judgment for five or six years, and when judgment was finally rendered, it was for a sum exceeding $530, debt or damage, besides costs of suit.

Now the lien created by the attachment upon the debtor’s property could not exceed the sum which the officer was commanded in his precept to attach; the officer’s return does not profess to go beyond it, and would have been void for the excess if it had. The Morse levy was made for the whole sum for which judgment was rendered, with costs of levy, thus exceeding the amount of Brown’s property which the officer was directed to attach, and did attach, by $77.

As the judgment-creditor confounded, in his judgment and levy, a claim for which he had no lien by attachment with one for which [331]*331he might have had such lien, the lieu fails altogether, and the plaintiff’s title must be deemed to have originated with the levy only, and cannot relate back to the date of the attachment. The difficulty was curable only by a remission, on the part of Morse & Co., of so much of their claim as exceeded $500, and by their taking-judgment and levying- their execution for no more than the officer had attached.

For obvious reasons, an amendment increasing the ad damnum would have dissolved the attachment. The creditor is placed in no better position by persisting in taking judgment and levying his execution for the excess.

Was the levy, under which the plaintiff claims, properly made ?

The only objection specially alleged against it by the tenant’s watchful counsel is, that it describes Brown’s interest as an undivided fifth part of the estate, when, if the demandant’s view of the title be correct, the debtor’s interest was in fact about nineteen-twentieths. R. S., c. 76, § 7, providing that “the whole or a part of an estate held in joint tenancy or in common, may be taken and held in common, but the -whole estate must be described, and the share of it owned by the debtor must be stated,” is cited, and it is contended that a misstatement of the amount of the debtor’s interest is fatal to the levy. But the same requirement as to stating the debtor’s shai-e or interest is found in c. 94, § 11, of the Revised Statutes of 1841, and this identical objection was made and considered in Rawson v. Clark, 38 Maine, 223, and held insufficient to invalidate the levy for reasons which are so well set forth there, that it is unnecessary to reiterate them here. The case is not like that of the levy in Rawson v. Lowell, 34 Maine, 201, a levy upon four-fifths of the debtor’s interest in common, omitting any statement of what the share owned by the debtor was. That left the amount of the debtor’s property taken to satisfy the execution altogether uncertain. It might be more, it might be less, according to the share in the whole which he was found to own. But here the levy is upon one-fifth of the whole, and of that fifth the debtor is stated to be the owner. It is a sufficient compliance with the statute re[332]*332quirement, even if it should appear that the debtor in fact owned more than a fifth. There is no uncertainty here as to what the levy covered. The amount of the debtor’s interest which is taken is definitely stated; it is not a fraction of an uncertain fraction; all that is designed to be compassed by requiring the share owned by the debtor to be stated is accomplished, and, as remarked by the court in Howe v. Wildes, 34 Maine, 574, “ the construction contended for by the tenant would subject creditors to unreasonable hazard and liability to loss.”

Nor do we think that the levy is liable to be defeated by the fact that Morse & Co. took a judgment for debt or damage exceeding the ad damnum in their writ.

Admitting that it is incumbent upon the demandant claiming under a levy to show a valid judgment, and that the tenant is in such a position as to entitle him to question and impeach the judgment (as to which, however, see Woodman v. Smith, 37 Maine, 21), still we find here a judgment rendered, by a court having jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter, upon process duly served on the defendant, Elisha Brown, and the error is not of such a description as could, at any time, under our statutes (R. S., c. 82, § 10), have been made available to reverse the judgment; for the persons and case can be rightly understood, and the defect, might have been amended, though, as we have before seen, an amendment would have been fatal to the plaintiff’s attachment. Moreover, the time -within which a writ of error might have been brought to reverse it, had there been good cause, has elapsed, and the judgment of Morse & Co. must be deemed valid and binding, and the levy effectual to give the levying creditor (and through him, the demandant) such title as Elisha Brown had at the date of it.

We come, then, to the consideration of the matters set up in defense.

Of the seven levies, under which the tenant claims title in himself, five were made Nov. 21, 1856, as upon land held by the debt- or, Brown, in fee-simple and in severalty, and no reason is assigned in either of them for levying upon an undivided share instead of [333]*333making tbe levy upon a portion of tbe property by metes and bounds. It is essential to the validity of such a levy, under c. 94, § 13, R. S. of 1841, that it should appear therein that the premises to bo levied on could not be divided without damage to the whole. Merrill v. Burbank, 23 Maine, 538; Mansfield v. Jack, 24 Maine, 98.

The omission must be held fatal to these five levies; and as they cover of the whole estate, it is plain that the one-fifth levied on by the demandant’s grantor was left open to his subsequent levy. But the levy upon Hammond’s execution against Brown and others, though not defective in this particular, seems to be identical in phraseology, so far as the statement of notification to the particular debtor, whose land was seized, and choice of an appraiser by him is concerned, with the levy in Harriman v. Cummings, 45 Maine, 351, where it was held that it must appear with certainty that the debtor, whose estate was taken, selected one of the appraisers, or was notified to choose one and neglected, or the levy will be void. That decision was followed in Boynton v. Grant, 52 Maine, 220, and must be deemed conclusive against the validity of Hammond’s levy.

Apparently, the only valid levy presented by the tenant is that of Sidelinger upon of the property, and that is offered in evidence by the demandant to justify the course, taken by Morse

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Bluebook (online)
58 Me. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-sleeper-me-1870.