Steam Stone Cutter Co. v. Jones

13 F. 567, 21 Blatchf. 138, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2041
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 13 F. 567 (Steam Stone Cutter Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steam Stone Cutter Co. v. Jones, 13 F. 567, 21 Blatchf. 138, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2041 (uscirct 1882).

Opinion

Blatchford, Justice.

This is a suit in equity. The plaintiff, a corporation, in 1868 brought a suit in equity in this court against the defendant, the Windsor Manufacturing Company, a corporation, and one Lamson, for the infringement of letters patent. The defendants appeared and answered, issue was joined, proofs were taken by both parties, the case was heard, and on the seventh of October, 1870, an interlocutory decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff, directing a recovery of profits, and referring it to a master to take [569]*569and report an account of such profits. Afterwards the plaintiff presented to this court a sworn petition setting forth that the damages sustained by it by such infringement wore large; that it had no security for the payment thereof; that the defendants were about to sell and dispose of their property within reach of the process of the court; that the defendant Lamson was about to remove from this state and district with such property as he might be unable to dispose of; and that unless it could, by writ of sequestration, fix a lien thereon, such litigation would be wholly fruitless in respect to said damages or profits. The petition prayed the court to issue a writ of sequestration in favor of the petitioner against the defendants, their goods, chattels, and estate, for such purpose. On tho eleventh of October, 1.870, the court, on tho petition and affidavits accompanying it, ordered that such writ issue to tho value of $40,000; and on that day a writ was issued in due form to the marshal of this district commanding him “to take, attach, and sequester tho goods, chattels, and estate” of the defendants to the said value, “and detain and keep the same under sequestration according law, to respond to the final decree which may be made in said cause, agreeably to law in that behalf,” and to notify the defendants, “as the law requires and directs.” On the thirteenth of October, 1870, the marshal, by virtue of said writ, attached, as the property of the Windsor Manufacturing Company, “all the real estate in the town of Windsor, Vermont,” and “all their right, title, and equity of redemption in said real estate;” and on the same day “lodged in the town clerk’s office of said town for record a true and attested copy of the original writ, with a description of the real estate so attached, with this, my return, thereon indorsed;” and on the same day delivered to the president of the corporation a true and attested copy of said writ, and a list of the property attached, with his return thereon indorsed. ITe afterwards made to this court a return on tho writ to the above effect. On tho twentieth of October, 1870, the marshal delivered to the clerk of tlio corporation a true and attested copy of the writ, together with a list and descriptions of the real estate so attached, with his said returns thereon indorsed, and he afterwards made to this court a return on the writ to said effect.

The bill in this case sots forth tho foregoing matters, and avers that the towm clerk’s office of the town of Windsor, being by law the office where by law a deed of such real estate was required to bo recorded, thereupon and by force thereof tire real estate afterwards [570]*570mentioned in the bill, being part of the real estate in said town then owned by said corporation, became duly attached, sequestered, and held, under said writ, to respond to the final decree which might be made in said cause; that thereafter said master filed his report, and a decree was entered April 6, 1880, decreeing that the said corporation pay to the plaintiff, as profits and costs of suit, $23,232.75, with interest from that date, and that if said sum should not be paid within410 days from that date special execution should issue in favor of the plaintiff against said corporation for said sum; that said corporation having neglected to pay said sum an execution was issued June 1, 1880, to the marshal on said decree; that on the third of June, 1880, the marshal, under the execution, demanded of the secretary and treasurer of the corporation the said sum, and it having neglected to make payment thereof, and the execution being unsatisfied to the amount of $21,826.82, with interest and officer’s charges, he, on the thirtieth day of July, 1880, by direction of the plaintiff, extended and levied said execution on certain pieces of land in Windsor, being the same land so sequestered and attached as the estate of said corporation in fee, all the said land being the estate of the said corporation in fee; that appraisers were appointed,- who appraised the said land in parcels; that parcel fiSTo. 1, on which there was a mortgage to the Windsor Savings Bank for $10,000, on which there was due $10,351.50, was appraised, subject to said mortgage, at $11,648.50, as its just and true value in money, to satisfy in part said execution and the legal charges thereon, and said marshal set out said parcel' No. 1, in part satisfaction of said execution and fees, by certain metes and bounds, which are given; that parcel No. 2 was appraised and set out in like manner at $4,000, parcel No. 3 at $1,000, and parcel No. 4, on which was a mortgage on which $20,-703 was due, at $3,697, subject- to said mortgage; that the amount due on said execution, with interest, costs, and charges, on July 30, 1880, was $22,468.67, leaving still due thereon $2,123.17; that said marshal made a return to said effect, on said execution, on the thirtieth day of July, 1880; that said execution was on said day, with said return, duly recorded in the land records of said town, and returned into the office of the clerk of this court and there recorded; that thereby, as against said corporation, its successors and assigns, a good title was made to said parcel No. 1 in favor of the plaintiff, its successors and assigns, forever; and that six months having elapsed since said execution was so extended, and no redemption [571]*571thereof having been made within that time, as provided by law, the plaintiff has become entitled to enter and take possession of the same.

The bill also alleges that on the twenty-seventh of February, 1872, the Windsor Manufacturing Company, by its deed of that date, for the consideration of $23,000, conveyed the said parcel No.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. 567, 21 Blatchf. 138, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steam-stone-cutter-co-v-jones-uscirct-1882.