Russell v. Ray

1 Tenn. App. 637, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 637 (Russell v. Ray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Ray, 1 Tenn. App. 637, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 84 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This is an action of replevin to recover a Ford automobile attached as the property of J. E. Ray and by virtue of the attachment in the possession of Arch Russell, constable. The attachment suit was brought before a justice of the peace of Carter county against Ray, a resident of North Carolina, and was instituted by summons and a writ of attachment was issued simultaneously, the process and attachment being served upon Ray while temporarily in Carter county, on the 4th day of July, 1922.

The plaintiffs in the attachment proceeding, was the firm of "Williams and Morrell Feed Company and,based upon a debt due them from Ray; the ease was set for trial on the same day. Upon application of Ray the ease was continued until July the 11th, Ray then returned to North Carolina and upon the 7th day of July filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the Federal district court of that State, and upon the 8th day of July was duly adjudged a bankrupt. He returned to Tennessee for trial of his attachment ease on the 11th, appeared before the justice of the peace, together with the trustee appointed in the bankruptcy proceeding and contested the suit, offering as evidence to defeat the attachment proceeding a paper purporting to be a duplicate copy of an order of adjudication of bankruptcy, and pleading such adjudication as a bar to-further proceeding before the justice, and demanded that the automobile be delivered up to him. This paper was objected to because not authenticated in the manner required by Act of Congress, and was excluded by the justice. Judgment was then taken in favor of the plaintiffs and' against the defendant Ray for the amount sued for, and an order of sale was made directing the constable to sell the automobile in satisfaction of the debt of $431.67. No appeal was taken from this judgment and the automobile was advertised by the constable for sale.

Ray then by petition secured from the Honorable E. H. Sanford, Judge of the United States district- court for the Eastern District of *639 Tennessee, an order directing the stay of all proceedings in the state courts for a space of thirteen months from the adjudication, or until two weeks after discharge of the bankrupt. Ray and the trustee again called upon the constable to surrender the automobile and were again refused. Ray and the trustee then filed a petition in the district court praying that Russell, the constable, and "Williams and Morrell Feed Company be directed to deliver over the automobile. The defendant to this petition moved for dismissal which was granted, the court being of the opinion that the facts as stated in the petition showed no interest in the trustee and the court was without jurisdiction because the property was alleged to be exempt property, and therefore not subject to be administered in the proceeding of bankruptcy. The stay order was dissolved and the petition dismissed. The stay order was entered July 18, 1922. The memorandum opinion directing "the dissolution and dismissal of petition was made by Judge Sanford on October 2, 1922. And on the same day, October 2, 1922, Ray instituted this replevin suit and regained by virtue of the proceeding the automobile in question.

On March 19, 1923, certain property of the bankrupt was set apart to him as exempt property, and as appears from the transcript of the proceedings in the bankruptcy court, one Ford automobile, value $150, was designated and set apart to the. bankrupt as exempt property under the laws of his domicile. On May 1, 1923, notice was given of a meeting of the creditors to be held on June 2, when the petition for discharge in bankruptcy would be acted upon, and upon that date an order was passed by the district judge ordering his discharge from all debts which existed on the 7th day of July, 1922, that being the date of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, excepting only such as are by law nondisehargeable.

Upon the trial of the replevin suit, in the circuit court, upon appeal from the justice’s court, the plaintiff below, the defendant in error here, introduced the transcript of. the record in the Federal court of North Carolina, establishing his bankruptcy and discharge, and also the transcript of the record of the ancillary proceedings had before Judge Sanford in the district Federal court in Tennessee, predicating his right to recover the'car upon the-ground, first, that the proceedings in bankruptcy annulled and avoided the levy of the attachment under which the defendant Russell held the property in his official capacity as constable, the attachment having been issued and served within four months of bankruptcy, and therefore his detention of the car was unlawful; second, that the car having been declared exempt property, by virtue of the proceedings in bankruptcy, and the order made March 19, 1923, setting it apart and declaring it to be exempt property, then the property was not *640 subject to attachment or execution and the plaintiff was entitled to recover it in a replevin proceeding.

The plaintiff in error, defendant below, contends that the adjudication per se,. did not annul and avoid the attachment, or the proceedings before' the justice, and in any event the proceedings were regular and unappealed from and were binding as an adjudication.

The statements of the contentions as made really form the issues. The assignments of error only amplify the plaintiff in error’s contentions, with the exception of the first which is, there is no competent evidence to support the judgment of the court. Under this assignment we believe the legal rights of the parties can be tested and declared.

The issues involved in this suit are not clearly defined in the bri'efs of counsel, and probably were confused on the trial in the lower court. This has'given rise to numerous contentions which have been ably argued, but these contentions, we believe, disappear when the real issues are isolated. The first made by the plaintiff in error is that this is an attempt to review, revise or annul a judgment at law in a collateral proceeding. We. believe this to be a misconception so far as the main issue under the replevin suit is concerned; the ordinary rule is that a defendant in a suit at law cannot maintain an action of replevin against an officer holding property under attachment or execution, but there is a well-established exception to this rule which is that a defendant may recover his property from an officer holding the samé under a writ where the property is exempt or has been wrongfully levied upon. Wilson v. McQueen, 1 Head, 17; Sauon v. Hall, 4 Lea, 498; Cryer v. Mayfield, 5 App. Cas., 537.

Under the exception, as stated, the defendant in error can maintain a replevin suit to recover the property attached if in fact the property was exempt property, and the question to be determined then is whether or not the plaintiff below, established by any evidence that the property in question is exempt property, at the time of the attachment. If not exempt at the date of the attachment, then it becomes a question of law of what affect the subsequent setting apart of the property as exempt 'has upon the rights of the parties.

We see no reason why the exception to'the general rule as above stated, is not broad enough to authorize the plaintiff to assert his right to possession by replevin if the attachment lien is destroyed or becomes void for any reason subsequent to the levy.

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Related

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171 S.W.2d 832 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 637, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-ray-tennctapp-1925.