State ex rel. Child v. District Court of Chippewa County

88 N.W. 755, 85 Minn. 283, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 386
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 17, 1902
DocketNos. 12,901-(216)
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 88 N.W. 755 (State ex rel. Child v. District Court of Chippewa County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Child v. District Court of Chippewa County, 88 N.W. 755, 85 Minn. 283, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 386 (Mich. 1902).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

The question here presented is perplexing, and grows out of the rather indefinite wording of G. S. 1894, §§ 5182, 5183, relating to the place of trial of civil actions. Section 5182 is as follows:

“Actions for the following causes shall be tried in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated, subject to the power of the court to-change the place of trial'as hereinafter provided. First. For the recovery of real property, or of an estate or interest therein, or for the determination, in hereinafter provided. First. For the recovery of real property, Second. For the partition of real properly. Third. For the foreclosure of a mortgage of real property. Fourth. For the recovery of personal property detained for any cause.”

This section seems to have been taken bodily from the New York Code, and is found in the earliest of our territorial statutes, except, that the word “detained,” in the fourth subdivision, was for many years “restrained,” a change having been made by statute in 1876. Section 5183 is of more recent origin, and was first enacted in 1885. It does not differ from section 5182 in so far as concerns this case.

The pertinent facts here are that in the year 1898 one Hosmer [285]*285entered and docketed in the district court of Hennepin county a monéy judgment against Kittie L. Hart, her husband, and several other persons. This judgment was subsequently assigned to the relator, Child. Immediately afterwards a transcript thereof was duly docketed in Chippewa county, in this state. The debtor, Mrs. Hart, before mentioned, then owned real property in that county, u^on which the judgment became a lien under the statute. Later she conveyed this real estate to one Fitzgerald, and he conveyed to the respondent Rich, both conveyances being warranty deeds in form, containing full covenants against incumbrances. In August, 1901, this relator, as the judgment creditor, caused an execution to be duly issued out of and under the seal of the district court of Hennepin county, directed to and delivered to the sheriff of Chippewa county, and thereupon the latter levied upon the land in question, and took the proper steps toward making sale thereof under the execution.

Thereupon Rich, as owner of the land, began an action in Chippewa county against relator, Child, Mrs. Hart, her husband, Fitzgerald, Hosmer, and the sheriff of said county, alleging in his complaint, among other things, that there was no proof on file in the proper office of the service of any summons in the original action upon the defendant Kittie L. Hart; that she did not appear in said action, and that as a matter of fact no summons or process of any kind or nature was ever served upon her in any manner; that at the time he purchased the land from Fitzgerald, and for a valuable consideration, he had no knowledge of said purported judgment, or that a transcript thereof had been docketed in said Chippewa county; and that said judgment was, for the reasons before stated, improperly, without authority of lawr, and contrary thereto, entered against said Kittie L. Hart. The relief sought, according to the demand in the complaint, was that it be adjudged and decreed that no judgment was ever recovered or docketed against Mrs. Hart in the district court of Hennepin county in the action in which Hosmer was the plaintiff; that the transcript of such judgment so filed in the office of the clerk of said district court for Chippewa county be set aside, and the docketing thereof vacated; and that Child has no right, title, interest, claim, demand, or lien, [286]*286legal or equitable, in or upon the real property on which the levy had been made, and which had been conveyed to Rich, as before stated.

The defendant Child seasonably undertook to change the place of trial of said action to Hennepin county, in which he had resided for many years. This attempt was resisted by Rich, and the question presented by this order, to show cause why a peremptory writ of mandamus should not issue commanding and directing the judges of the district court of Chippewa county and the clerk thereof to transfer said action and to transmit all files therein to Hennepin county, involves the proper place of trial of the action under our statute; Mr. Child contending that the action is transitory, and properly triable in the county in which he resides, while Mr. Rich insists that it is a local action, and must be tried in the county in which the real property is situated, unless removed for cause. In brief, his claim is that the real property is the subject of the action because the levy has been made and a sale advertised by the sheriff. It is conceded that, if the action is for the determination in any form of a right or interest in real property, within the meaning of section 5182, it was properly brought, and should be tried in Chippewa county.

It must be admitted that prior to the levy of the execution the lien of the judgment was not an estate or interest in real property under all of the decisions.

In Ashton v. Slater, 19 Minn. 300 (347), it was said, quoting from Conard v. Atlantic Ins. Co., 1 Pet. 386: “A general lien by judgment on land * * only confers a right to levy on the same to' the exclusion of other adverse interests subsequent to the judgment. * * * In short, a judgment creditor has no jus in re, but a mere power to make his general lien effectual by following up the steps of the law, and consummating his judgment by an execution and levy on the land.”

And, further: “A judgment lien is not an estate or interest in the land. It is held that fit only confers a right to levy on the land to the exclusion of other adverse interests subsequent to the judgment,’ ” — citing 3 Parsons, Cont. 275. See also 2 Freeman, Judgm. § 338.

[287]*287Prior to the year 1874, when the statutes relating to the quieting of title to real estate did not permit, in terms, the bringing of an action to determine a lien upon real property asserted by another, as it now does, it was held that a lien was not such an estate or interest in land as to make it a proper subject for adjudication in an action under that statute. Turrell v. Warren, 25 Minn. 9.

As having a bearing on the present question, we have been referred to Smith v. Barr, 76 Minn. 513, 79 N. W. 507, and Kommer v. Harrington, 83 Minn. 114, 85 N. W. 939.

The Smith case was brought to cancel and set aside an administrator’s sale of a number of parcels of land, and for an accounting as to a quantity thereof which had previously been disposed of by the purchasers at such sale, the claim being that a conspiracy had been entered into between the administrator and the purchasers, which resulted in the sale to the latter for about one-eighth of the value of the property. We held that the action was properly brought in the county wherein the defendants resided, although none of the lands were situated therein. It was said that the relief asked for by way of an accounting was not merely incidental and auxiliary to a recovery of the unsold lands, but was itself a part of the primary and principal relief asked for in the action. The court then stated that: “Inasmuch as the general rule is that actions must be brought and tried where the parties reside, and that they must be brought and tried where the subject-matter is situated is the exception to the rule, it has been frequently held that, to bring a case within the exception, the subject-matter must be wholly local; that is, exclusively within the exception.”

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.W. 755, 85 Minn. 283, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-child-v-district-court-of-chippewa-county-minn-1902.