Stevenson v. Palmer

14 Colo. 565
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 14 Colo. 565 (Stevenson v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevenson v. Palmer, 14 Colo. 565 (Colo. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hayt

delivered the opinion of the court.

The statute under which the redelivery bonds were both given reads as follows: “The defendant may, at any time before final judgment in the action, release all property which may have been seized by virtue of the attachment writ, by his executing an undertaking as hereinafter provided. Such undertaking shall be given by the defendant to the plaintiff, be signed by two responsible sureties, each a resident of the county in which the suit is pending, and shall be to the effect that in case the plaintiff recover judgment against the defendant in the action, and the attachment is not dissolved, the defendant will deliver to the constable all property which has been seized by him by virtue of the attachment writ, or, on failure so to do, will pay to the plaintiff the full value of the pr -perty attached, not exceeding the amount of the judgment and costs recovered in the action.” Gen. St. 1883, § 2015.

In case of levy of the writ of attachment, unless a redelivery bond be given, the officer must retain the custody of the pi’operty awaiting the result of the attachment proceedings. This is essential in order that the property may be under the control of the court to answer any demand which may be established against the defendant by the final judgment in the case. If the bond be given, the responsibility of the obligors [567]*567is substituted for that of the officer for the property attached; the principal object of the bond being to insure the safe-keeping and faithful return of the property attached to the constable, although, in the alternative, the obligors may discharge themselves from their obligation by paying the full value of the property, not exceeding the amount of the judgment and costs in the action. Were it not for this alternative provision, there could be no question as to the continuance of the lien, although the bond be given. The sole condition would then be that the property shall be returned to the constable if plaintiff recover judgment and the attachment be not dissolved. To hold that the property would be liable to execution under such, circumstances would be to allow third parties to produce a forfeiture of the conditions of the bond; for a levy would make the performance of the conditions of the bond impossible. And the courts and law writers unite in saying that the property is not so liable. Drake, Attachm. § 331; Wade, Attachm. § 193; Wap. Attachm. 396, 397; Tyler v. Safford, 24 Kan. 580; Roberts v. Dunn, 71 Ill. 46; Hagan v. Lucas, 10 Pet. 401.

“ The sheriff, by intrusting the property to the defendant under such bond, does not lose his legal possession of it. The defendant holds under the sheriff, so that the res is still in the constructive possession of the court. The ancillary proceeding in the suit does not abate by virtue of the forthcoming bond, which would inevitably be the case were the court to lose its custody and jurisdiction of the property, and the defendant to regain unqualified possession of it.” Wap. Attachm. 397.

But where, as with us, the statute provides that the bond is to be given to the plaintiff, and conditioned that the property shall be returned to the officer, or its value paid to the plaintiff, it must be admitted that the authorities are so conflicting as to create some doubt as to the law on the subject. Upon this question Mr. Waples gives it as his opinion that property thus released may [568]*568be sold by the defendant, subjected to new attachments-by other creditors, or levied upon in" execution, in like manner as though the attachment had been dissolved. Id. 401, 402. The author cites several Iowa cases, which undoubtedly support the text. See Jones v. Peasley, 3 G. Greene, 52; Austin v. Burgett, 10 Iowa, 302; Woodward v. Adams, 9 Iowa, 474.

Drake, in his work on Attachment, contents himself with quoting in a foot-note the doctrine of the leading Iowa case without comment. Drake, Attachm. 266. In the treatise of Mr. Wade, in the section previously referred to, the author, in speaking of forthcoming bonds, says: “In some of the states the bonds are conditioned in the alternative, for the delivery of the chattels, or for the payment of their value or the amount of the judgment. But the alternative condition does not discharge the property from the lien.” In support of this opinion the author cites two cases: Gray v. Perkins, 12 Smedes & M. 622; Gass v. Williams, 46 Ind. 253.

The section under consideration by the court in the Mississippi case provided, in substance, that attachments shall hereafter be repleviable, at any time before final judgment, on the appearance of such defendant, and his execution of a bond, with sufficient security, payable to the plaintiff, in a sum double the value of the property attached, and conditioned to have said property forthcoming to abide the order or decree of the court to which said writ of attachment shall be returnable; or, in default thereof, to pay and satisfy, to an extent not exceeding the value of said property, such order or decree of said court. And the court held that by the very terms of the condition, “to have said property forthcoming to abide the order or decree of the court,” an intention to preserve the lien was manifest.

So, also, in the case of Gass v. Williams, supra, under a statute authorizing the property to be released upon the giving of a delivery bond conditioned for its return, [569]*569or, in the alternative, for the payment of its value, not exceeding the amount of the judgment and costs, the court held that the giving of a bond did not discharge the lien of'the attachment, but that the custody of the defendant was thereby substituted for that of the officer, and that the property was as far from the reach of processes as it would have been in the officer’s hands.

Without the alternative provision of the statute, the measure of the liability of the defendant and sureties upon the bond in case the property is not redelivered, as required by the terms of the bond, is the value of the property attached, provided the value does not exceed the amount of the judgment and costs. Wap. Attachm. 396, 397; Drake, Attachm. § 342.

And such is the exact liability fixed by the terms of the act. It will be' seen, therefore, that the alternative provision of the statute is but a legislative indorsement of a rule of decision previously announced by the courts. Certainly, therefore, every reason for holding that without this provision the lien is not discharged by the giving of a redelivery bond is an argument in favor of the conclusion that under such a provision the lien remains although the bond be given. The primary condition of the bond in either case is that the defendant will, on demand, redeliver the property; the liability of the sureties for the value attaching only upon his failure so to do.

The purpose of having the property redelivered is that it may be subjected to the payment of the judgment; and we think it wo'uld be a fraud upon the sureties to allow it to be subjected to execution issued at the suit of other parties, and thus permit third parties to defeat a compliance with that which we have seen is the primary condition of the bond.

In suits in the justice’s court there is no provision of law for prorating the proceeds of the attached property, the creditor first securing a lien upon the property by attachment being entitled to sufficient of the pro[570]

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Bluebook (online)
14 Colo. 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-palmer-colo-1890.