Spang v. Robinson

24 W. Va. 327, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 62
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 24 W. Va. 327 (Spang v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spang v. Robinson, 24 W. Va. 327, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 62 (W. Va. 1884).

Opinion

Green, Judge.

The determination of this case depends on the true meaning of chapter 188 of the Code of Virginia (see edition of 1860 p. 777) as to the power of the commissioner to compel a judgment-debtor, who in answer to interrogatories has stated that he owned a chose in action, to assign it by a written assignment under his hand and seal to the sheriff of the county, in whose hands is the fieri facias, in trust for the use of the plaintiff in such execution to the extent of his judgment, interest and costs, the residue of the moneys arising from the chose action when collected by the sheriff to be paid to the debtor, who executed such assignment under seal. This chapter 188 of Code of 1860 has in all material respects so far as it affects this cause remained in force [332]*332from 1849 to the present time both in Virginia and in West Virginia, being substantially the same in these respects as chapter 141 of the Code of West Virginia; and the members of the bar in both States are familiar with the mode of proceeding thereunder. It is explained by Professor Minor in the first edition of his Institutes on pages 842 and 843 of vol. 4.

The object of filing the interrogatories to the debtor under section 5 of chapter 188 of Code of Virginia or section 4 of chapter 141 of Code of West Virginia is stated on the face of these sections: “To ascertain the estate, on which a writ of fieri facias is a lien, and to ascertain any real estate in or out of this State, to which a debtor named in such fieri facias is entitled.” When such real and personal estate including choses in action have been discovered by answers to such interrogatories, inasmuch as the creditor can have no means of enforcing his judgment in this State against the lands of the debtor in other States, unless the creditor make a conveyance thereof for his benefit, § 6 of ch. 188 of Code of Va. of 1860 or §5 of ch. 141 of Code of W. Va. provides, that such debtor may be compelled to convey said land to the officer, in whose hands the fieri facias has been or is; and if he refuses to make such conveyance, ho. can be imprisoned till he does make such conveyance. But there exists no necessity' for 'permitting or allowing such commissioner to compel the debtor to convey or assign either personal property or choses in action, as this chapter provides for the creditor other and simpler modes of getting such personal property appropriated to the payment of his execution; and such choses in action as to visible personal property and bank-notes or money were to be delivered to the same officer who had held or still held such fieri facias ; or as that might be troublesome, when such . visible personal property' was in a remote part of the State, the commissioner might order it to be delivered to some other officer and might proscribe the manner" of it delivery; and all this he could compel the debtor to do by imprisonment, if necessary. When thus delivered the court might order the property to be sold under an order of the court and proper application of the proceeds to be made See sec. 9 of ch. 188 of Code of Va. of 1860 or sec. 8 of ch. 141 of Code [333]*333of W. Va. Provision is likewise made for the sale and disposition of the proceeds of real estate lying out of the State, which has been so conveyed by the debtor. Ho provision is made for the enforcement of the sale of the land in the State. The primary object of this mode of proceeding being simply to discover on what property the fieri facias was a lien. "When this was done, except in cases where the general law furnished no sufficient remedy to the plaintiff in the execution, no remedy was specially provided for him in this chapter; and therefore as the law provided proper modes for subjecting real estate lying in this State to the payment ot a judgment, when the answers to the interrogatories discovered that the debtor owned real estate in the State, the plaintiff was left to enforce his judgment against it by a writ of elegit, while it was in force, or by a suit in chancery since its abolition. '

If the defendant in the execution in his answers to the interrogatories disclosed that he had evidences of debt or other choses in action, what was it the duty of the commissioner to do in regard to them? The answer under section 6 of chapter 188 of Code of Virginia of 1860 or section 5 of chapter 141 of Code of West Virginia is clear. He should order them to be delivered by the debtor to the sheriff or other officer just as any other personal property was to be delivered; and he might, as in the case of visible property, compel-the delivery of such evidences of debt, bonds, notes or even open accounts by imprisonment of the debtor, if necessary. But it seems to me obvious, that he could ñot compel such debtor to assign either by a writing not under seal or by a writing-under seal or by an endorsement of any such bond or note or in any other manner such chose in action to such officer. The delivery of such bond, note or open account was not intended to transfer such chose in action to the officer but was intended simply to confer on him an authority for sixty days to collect such chose in action. Or more properly speaking it was intended to authorize the person, who owed the debtor as shown by such chose in action, to pay it to the sheriff or other officer for a period of sixty days and only for that period, for at the end of sixty days the sheriff or other officer was and is bound to return such chose in action, evidence of debt or other security, which may remain in his [334]*334hands, to the clerk’s office of the court, from which the fieri facias issued. This appears to me to be clearly the true meaning to he deduced from sections 8 and 10 of chapter 188 of Code of 1860 and sections 5 and 9 of chapter 141 of Code of West Virginia. When this chose in action was returned to the clerk’s office in sixty days, he having no title to it by assignment or otherwise and having no authority to collect it an}7 longer, the creditor’s mode of collecting it is clearly pointed out ar.d provided for in sections 11 and 15 of chapter 188 of Code of Virginia of 1860 and in sections 10 and 14 of chapter 141 of Code of West Virginia. But as certain property, to which a debtor had a claim, or certain dioses in action could not bo appropriately enforced by these proceedings by suggestion, section 16 of chapter 188 of Code of Virginia of 1860 and section 15 of chapter 141 of Code of West Virginia provide for the recovery of such choses in action and such personal property by fhe appropriate suits in law or in equity.

Chapter 188 of Code of Va. of 1860 and chapter 141 ot Code of W. Va., were intended obviously not to confer any new rights on the execution-creditor, except in the single case, where the debtor’s land lay .out of the State, but was intended simply to enable him to compel the execution-debtor to discover on oath what the creditor had a lien upon, and then to permit him to enforce his lien in modes provided by the common law or by statute. But it was not intended by this act to authorize the commissioner to compel the debtor under the penalty of imprisonment to execute any assignment or paper of any sort conferring new rights upon the creditor, except in the single case where he had lands outside of the State, which the commissioner might compel him to convey.

The commissioner therefore in this case had no right to compel Jas. H. Robinson to execute the assignment under seal dated September 28, 1867, to the sheriff of Ohio county conveying “all his right, title and interest in and to the claim which he had against Wm. T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 W. Va. 327, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spang-v-robinson-wva-1884.