Trowbridge v. Bullard

45 N.W. 1012, 81 Mich. 451, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 774
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 1012 (Trowbridge v. Bullard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trowbridge v. Bullard, 45 N.W. 1012, 81 Mich. 451, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 774 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Long, J.

There is no controversy over the facts in this case. As they appeared upon the trial in the court below, they are substantially as follows:

On September 22, 1888, Messrs. Clark, Baker & Co., who were wholesale grocers at Jackson, in this State, had & claim against one Frank Potts, of Decatur, and to recover and collect it commenced a suit by attachment in the circuit court for Van 'Burén county. The writ of attachment was delivered to James F. Bullard, who was then the under-sheriff of the county of Van Burén. On •September 22, Bullard attached a quantity of property, consisting largely of teas, as the property of Frank Potts; the same being then in the custody of Trowbridge & Roberts, who claimed to have purchased it of Potts. It was claimed that Potts had fraudulently disposed of the property to Trowbridge & Roberts, to cheat and defraud his creditors. The officer was unable to find Potts within his county, and could not make personal service of the attachment upon him. The writ of attachment was in all respects properly returned; and on October 13, 1888, a notice was published of the issuing of the attachment pursuant to law. On November 28 proof of publication of said notice of attachment' was made. On the same day an affidavit was filed of the non-appearance of the defendant Potts, and the plaintiffs also filed their declaration. On November 28 the default of Potts for want of appearance was entered. On November 30 such default was made absolute. On December 12, 1888, a judgment was rendered in favor of Clark, Baker & Co., and against Potts, for $206 and costs. On December 13, 1888, execution upon such judgment was issued and delivered to [454]*454Bullard, who on December 17 levied upon the same property which he had attached, and, after giving a proper and sufficient notice, sold the property to Clark, Baker & Co., the plaintiffs in the attachment suit, on January 3, 1889.

On March 5, 1889, Theodore Trowbridge and Lewis D. Roberts commenced a suit in the circuit court for Van Burén county against James F. Bullard by summons, and on May 1, 1889, filed a declaration as against him, in trover, for the property in question. The defendant appeared on May 15, and filed a plea of the general issue, and gave notice of justification under the attachment proceedings, and also under the levy of said execution.

At the trial, Theodore Trowbridge was sworn in behalf of the plaintiffs, and gave evidence tending to show the purchase of the property by himself and his co-plaintiff, Roberts, of the defendant Potts. Upon cross-examination, it was sought in behalf of the defendant to show that this sale was fraudulent, and made with the intent to cheat and defraud the creditors of Potts. The plaintiffs’ attorney objected to this, and the court ruled that-the testimony was inadmissible, and not proper cross-examination, as the case stood under the statement of counsel. The plaintiffs also gave evidence tending to' show the valtie of the property, and rested their case.

TJpon the part of the defendant, the’ proceedings in attachment1 were offered in evidence, and some testimony was given controverting that introduced upon the part of the plaintiff as to the value of the property.

The plaintiffs then introduced in evidence the balance of the proceedings in the attachment suit, including the judgment, execution, and the levy and sale thereunder. It will be seen that the default of the defendant was [455]*455entered within three days after the filing of the plaintiffs’ declaration therein, and that the judgment was entered within twelve days of such entry. It is conceded by defendant’s counsel that the judgment, and the proceedings thereunder to sell the property, are void.

The defendant, however, claimed the right to justify under the attachment; insisting that, if the judgment was void, the attachment was still valid in his hands, and an ample and sufficient justification to him, provided it could be shown that the sale to the plaintiffs was fraudulent, and that the property attached was liable to attachment by the creditors of Potts. The court held, however, that the defendant could not justify thereunder, and directed the jury that, if they found the property had been sold by Potts to Trowbridge & Roberts, they (the plaintiffs in the action) would be entitled to a verdict for the value. Verdict and judgment were then, given for plaintiffs for the value of the property. Defendant brings error.

The only question raised is whether, under the circumstances, the defendant was entitled to attack the transfer of the goods to the plaintiffs as fraudulent, though the judgment upon which the execution issued was void. It is claimed by counsel for the defendant that, though this judgment, and execution, levy, and sale thereunder, were void, yet that the attachment remained unimpaired, and the officer had the right thereunder to show that the alleged purchase by Trowbridge & Roberts was fraudulent.

The only evidence which defendant offered which was excluded by the court was his proposal to show that the purchase by plaintiffs from Potts was fraudulent as to his creditors; and the title of plaintiffs to the goods in controversy was not attempted to be impeached upon any other ground. The claim, therefore, was that, inasmuch [456]*456as the defendant had on September 33, 1888, seized and taken these goods from the possession of Trowbridge & Roberts under a valid writ of attachment issued against Mr. Potts, he could attack the title of Trowbridge & Roberts as fraudulent against the creditors of Potts, though he had not followed up the writ of attachment to judgment.

It is further insisted that the case must be governed by its status at the time the plaintiffs’ suit against the defendant was commenced, and that at that time no unreasonable time had elapsed after the period at which a valid judgment might have been entered; that, when property is seized under attachment, it is in the custody of the law, and the officer is bound to produce it to satisfy any judgment which may be obtained in the proceeding, and the officer may justify under it, and therefore it is a protection to him. But the difficulty of this position is that the officer is not only seeking to justify his action in holding the property this length of time, but is also endeavoring to assail the title of others. He has not seized goods in the hands of Potts, the defendant in the writ, and confessedly owned by him; but he has taken goods away from Trowbridge & Roberts, to which they assert title under a purchase from Potts, and is seeking to hold them on the ground that, by virtue of a writ against Potts in favor of certain of his creditors, he is in a position to contest the right set up by the plaintiffs. The rule is that judgment creditors may contest the title in such cases, but that the general creditors cannot do so. It has many times been held by this Court that general creditors, having no judgment or lien on the debtor’s property, cannot attack conveyances or other dealings for fraud. McKibben v. Burton, 1 Mich. 213; Maynard v. Hoskins, 9 Id. 485; Tyler v. Peatt, 30 Id. 63; Griswold v. Fuller, 33 Id. 268; Stoddard v [457]*457McLane, 56 Id. 11; Root v. Potter, 59 Id. 498; Scott v. Chambers, 62 Id. 532; Krolik v. Root, 63 Id. 562.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 1012, 81 Mich. 451, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trowbridge-v-bullard-mich-1890.