Nichols v. Chittenden

14 Colo. App. 49
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1899
DocketNo. 1575
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Colo. App. 49 (Nichols v. Chittenden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Chittenden, 14 Colo. App. 49 (Colo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinions

Wilson, J.

In order that there may be a full understanding of the issue presented for determination in this cause, it is proper to give a somewhat detailed statement of facts.

[50]*50On the /30th day of July, 1892, the Mosler Safe Company brought suit in the district court of Arapahoe county against the Security Abstract & Rating Company to recover $100 and interest. In aid of the suit a writ of attachment was issued and levied on certain property conceded to belong to the defendant in that action. The facts of the levy and return will be exactly stated. The property in controversy consisted of certain abstract boohs known as “ records,” lettered from A to M consecutively, excepting the letters J and K ; eight books known as “rating ledgers,” numbered from L to V, G, I and L ; nine books, known as “ lot indices,” numbered from 1 to 9 inclusive; a land index No. 1, “tax sale book,” and two judgment record books. When the attachment writ came into the hands of the then sheriff, it is shown that he went to the office of the company and took possession of all this property, locking the door and remaining in possession of the office. The levy was exact and sufficient to reduce the property to the custody of the officer and fix the attachment lien, providing all other things were properly done by the sheriff to establish and perfect a lien. After the execution of the writ, and while the property was in the sheriff’s possession, the Security Abstract & Rating Company gave a bond in compliance, and in accordance with the terms of sections 111 and 112 of the code. Thereupon the officer made return that he had duly executed the writ by delivering it, leaving a copy with the manager and levying on all the books and office furniture of the defendant at 830 Seventeenth street in the city of Denver, Arapahoe county, Colorado, which were released on the same day and date by the giving of an undertaking as required by law. Thereafter this levy and the execution of this bond, the safe company proceeded with its suit, and on the 5th of November, 1896, obtained judgment against the Security Abstract & Rating Company for $512, and on the judgment the attachment issued was sustained. Thereupon a special execution was issued from the district court of Arapahoe county wherein the judgment was rendered, and delivered to the sheriff, defendant herein, [51]*51The writ commanded him to proceed to sell the property levied on in the attachment to satisfy the judgment. In obedience to the commands of the writ, the sheriff proceeded to the office of the plaintiff in this action, Nichols, and seized the property covered by the execution. Nichols then brought replevin against the officer to recover possession.

The facts on which the plaintiff’s title rests are these. After the property had been levied on and released by the execution of the statutory bond, and on the 8d day of January, 1894, one Allen Winch loaned the Security Abstract & Rating Company $2,000, evidenced by three promissory notes, one of $400 and two of $800 respectively, and took a chattel mortgage from the Security Abstract & Rating Company on the property which had been antecedently seized by the writ of attachment. Afterwards Winch renewed the mortgage in October, 1894, and April, 1895, each mortgage containing the same covenants as the first, the goods during all this time being in the undisputed possession of the Abstract Company. Thereafter Nichols bought these notes of Winch and there being a default by the mortgagor in the payment of what was due thereon, Nichols took possession of the books, and removed them to his own office. There had been no foreclosure of the mortgage or attempt to sell thereunder, though the assumption of possession was in accordance with the terms and conditions of the mortgage and rightfully taken. As before stated, the sheriff went to Nichols’s place of business and seized the books, etc. Thereupon Nichols brought replevin, serving his writ by the coroner; the Safe Company defended by the assertion of its title and lien obtained by the levy of the attachment, and a demurrer to the answer setting, up this defense having been overruled, plaintiff replied, and the case went to trial. On the trial the fact and circumstances of the original levy were established by sufficient evidence, and it abundantly appeared that in levying the attachment writ the officer proceeded according to law and assumed the actual custody, control and possession of the property. It was located at the place stated in the return, [52]*52was in the office of which the sheriff took possession, and there can be no doubt but that the sheriff made a legal levy. He attached to his return no inventory, but the identity of the property was abundantly proven, and what the sheriff afterwards took on the special execution issued on the judgment recovered by the Hosier Safe Company wherein the attachment was sustained, was that on which he had levied under the attachment writ.

This statement sufficiently discloses the question, whether the lien of an attachment acquired by a sufficient levy of a writ, continues after the execution of an undertaking provided for by code sections 111 and 112, and may be enforced against one who subsequently obtains possession of the property by the enforcement of a chattel mortgage executed by the attachment creditor after the levy but subsequent to the giving of the bond, and while he is in possession, where the mortgagee has no knowledge or notice of the levy, other than what is constructively given him by the pendency of the suit and the knowledge afforded by the papers therein and the return of the officer. The question comes in this exact shape, because the record discloses the fact to be that neither Winch nor Nichols had actual notice or knowledge of the making of the levy and the seizure of the goods, and no other than constructive notice that the apparent owner and possessor had no title. We may go further, and say that broadly stated the question is, does the lien of attachment still continue against property delivered to the defendant by the officer after the execution of the bond required by the code ? Does an innocent purchaser or subsequent incumbrancer of such property, take subject to the lien?

On this question an examination of the authorities, either directly in point or bearing upon it in principle, will disclose much conflict. This is not surprising, because attachment being solely a creature of statute, the statutory provisions regulating it are necessarily different to a greater or less extent in all of the states, and in fact in scarcely any are in perfect accord. The question therefore must be considered and [53]*53determined almost entirely upon the provisions of our own code, applying to them usual and well settled rules of statutory construction, and not losing sight of fixed principles of law, which should control unless it be clearly manifest that it was the legislative intent that they should not. The code sections which control and which require consideration are as follows:

“ See. 111. The defendant may at any time release any property in the hands of the sheriff by virtue of any writ of attachment, by executing an undertaking as provided for in the next section, and all the proceeds of sales and money collected by the sheriff, and all the property attached remaining in his hands, shall be released from the attachment and delivered to the defendant upon the justification of the sureties in the undertaking.
“Sec. 112.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Colo. App. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-chittenden-coloctapp-1899.