Templeton v. Mason

65 S.W. 25, 107 Tenn. 625
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 25 (Templeton v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Templeton v. Mason, 65 S.W. 25, 107 Tenn. 625 (Tenn. 1901).

Opinion

McAlister, J.

This is an attachment bill to impound certain property of defendants, and subject it to the satisfaction of complainant’s judgment. Complainant prayed that a decree be rendered in his favor against P. S. Mason, Sr., for the judgment set out in the bill; that writs of attachment issue to Knox, Roane, and Cumberland counties, to be levied upon all the legal and equitable rights and interests of the said P. S. Mason, Sr., and especially upon all the equity and right of redemption of the said P. S. Mason, Sr., in the several tracts of land which are described in this bill, and that the same [627]*627be sold in this proceeding in bar of all further equity of redemption of the said P. S. Mason, Sr., for the satisfaction of complainant’s demand. The ground alleged in the bill for the issuance of the attachment was that defendant had fraudulently conveyed his property as against the right of complainant, and with the intent to defraud complainant and to defeat him in the collection of said debt, etc. The defendant, Mason, who was a resident of Knox County, was served with process; the attachment issued and was levied. Defendant answered the bill, expressly denying all allegations of fraud made against him in the original bill, and denying that he had fraudulently transferred his property. He also denied that complainant had any right whatever to attach, or subject to the payment of said debts, his equity of redemption in the land described in the bill, but was bound to pursue the statutory method of redemption. On the hearing there was a decree in favor of complainant, the attachment was. sustained and the property ordered sold for the satisfaction of the decree. On appeal this decree was affirmed by the Court of Chancery Appeals. Defendant has again appealed and assigned two errors, namely: First, the Court erred in sustaining said writ of attachment and declaring a lien by virtue thereof to exist upon the property levied on, or any part of the same, to secure the judgment rendered against appellant in favor of complainant.

The Court of Chancery Appeals, in sustaining the [628]*628attachment herein, held that it was necessary for defendant to have denied the allegations of the bill upon which the attachment issued, by plea in abatement. There was no plea in abatement, but simply an unsworn answer denying that defendant had fraudulently conveyed his property. It is denied by defendant’s counsel that a plea in abatement is necessary in this character of case.

It has uniformly been held in attachment cases that this writ is essential to give the Court jurisdiction of the property, and that in order to reach the writ of attachment, a plea in abatement is necessary. The well recognized exception to the rule is that where an attachment is sued out under § 6097, Shannon’s Code, at the instance of creditors, without judgment at law, who are seeking to set aside fraudulent conveyances of property, the defense may be made by answer, and a plea in abatement is not necessary. The reason is that an attachment is not essential to the jurisdiction. It may be issued by the Chancellor at his discretion at the beginning, or during the progress of the cause, to impound and secure the property pending the litigation. Shannon’s Code, § 6098; August v. Seeskind, 6 Cold., 172; Brooks v. Gibson, 7 Lea, 272; Tarbox v. Tonder, 1 Tenn. Ch., 163; 11 Lea, 246; 7 Pickle, 413; 7 Heis., 34.

A lien attaches upon the property fraudulently conveyed, upon filing the bill to set aside the conveyance, and is good without an attachment against [629]*629the fraudulent vendor and vendee and creditors. August v. Seeskind, 6 Cold., 766; Brooks v. Gibson, 7 Lea, 274 (S. C., 1 Lea, 71); 7 Heis., 34; Greene v. Starnes, 1 Heis., 582.

A judgment and return of nulla bona is not necessary to a prosecution under this section. Shannon’s Code, § 6100.

But in cases of general attachment, where the bill does not seek to set aide the conveyance, but simply seeks to subject the property attached to sale, the attachment is essential to jurisdiction, and the grounds of attachment can only be controverted by plea in abatement. Tarbox v. Tonder, 1 Tenn. Ch., 163; Pace v. Plumlee, 2 Shann. Cas., 55; Foster v. Hall, 4 Hum., 340; Isaacks v. Edwards 7, Hum., 468; Kendricks v. Davis, 3 Cold., 524; Boyd v. Martin, 9 Heis., 386; Cheatham v. Pierce, 89 Tenn., 668.

The argument against this conclusion is that under the statutes any defense, not going to the jurisdiction of the Court, may be made by answer, Shannon’s Code, § 6128. The Act of 1871 requires the Clerk or Justice issuing the attachment upon application of the plaintiff to issue also a summons against the defendant, etc. It has been held under this Act that the summons thereunder is the leading process and the writ of attachment is 'merely ancillary. Bivins v. Mathews, 7 Bax., 256; Bank v. Foster, 6 Pickle, 735.

[630]*630It is then argued that jurisdiction of the person having been acquired by the execution of the subpoena to answer in this cause, that the impounding of the property for the purpose of final relief is not a matter going to the jurisdiction of the Court, and hence the grounds of the attachment may be denied by answer. Counsel cites in support of this position August v. Seeskind, 6 Cold., 172; Nailor v. Young, 7 Lea, 738.

The case of August v. Seeskind was brought to set aside a fraudulent conveyance, and it is conceded that in such a case the defense may be made by answer and a plea in abatement is not necessary. The attachment in such a case is not essential to the jurisdiction of the Court. Nailor v. Young belongs to the same class of cases. The Court said, “It is only where the objection is to the jurisdiction of the Court that the Code requires it to be made by demurrer, plea, or motion to dismiss; all other defenses may be incorporated in the answer.” £ ‘ This bill, ’ ’ continued the Court, ‘ ‘ is filed under the Code, § 4288 (Shannon, § 6097), which allows a creditor to come into equity for the purpose of setting aside a fraudulent conveyance of property by his debtor without first obtaining a judgment at law. In such a case the jurisdiction of the Court does not depend upon the attachment, which need not be resorted to except to impound the property,” citing August v. Seeskind, 6 Cold.; Tarbox v. Tonder, 1 Tenn. Ch., 163.

[631]*631These cases support the rule adopted by the Chancellor, and Court of Chancery Appeals, and there is nothing in recent legislation which has changed this rule.

The fundamental error, as we conceive, underlying the argument of learned counsel, is that jurisdiction of the property is acquired by the service of the summons. No lien is fastened upon the property by the filing of the bill, although the summons is executed. The property must be impounded by attachment. It is, true, as argued, that by the filing of a vendor’s bill, or a bill to foreclose a mortgage when the property is described in the bill, a lien is fastened upon the property upon the filing of the bill, and no attachment is necessary. . But this is not so by the simple filing of a general attachment bill, for any of the causes specified in the Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 25, 107 Tenn. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/templeton-v-mason-tenn-1901.