Wheaton v. Thompson

20 Minn. 196
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 20 Minn. 196 (Wheaton v. Thompson) 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
Wheaton v. Thompson, 20 Minn. 196 (Mich. 1873).

Opinion

[198]*198 By the Court.

Berry, J.

One Hempel, being owner of a stock of goods, assigned the same for the benefit of his creditors to Blackman. By virtue of sundry writs of attachment against Hempel, the plaintiff as sheriff of the county of Steele, levied upon the goods and took them from Blackman’s possession. Blackman in an action of claim and delivery retook the goods from plaintiff; the defendants, with others, executing the bond required by statute in such cases, conditioned for a return of the property if a return was adjudged, and for the payment by Blackman of such sum as might for anj' cause be recovered against him.

Upon the trial of the action of claim and delivery, the defendant therein, who is the plaintiff in the present action, had a verdict, in conformity to which judgment was entered that he recover possession of the goods, or in case possession could not be obtained, that he recover twelve thousand dollars, being the value of the goods as found by the jury, with eight hundred and seventy-five dollars damages for the taking and detention, besides costs. Being unable to obtain possession of the goods, the plaintiff' brings this action upon the bond. The case was tried by the court below upon an agreed statement of facts, the right to object to the competency of such facts being reserved. It appears that in his answer in the action of claim and delivery, the defendant therein, (i. e.,this plaintiff,) in justification of his levy, alleged “that as such sheriff he took the goods as the property of Hempel, under* and by virtue of certain writs of attachment duly allowed and issued out of, and under the seal of said court (the dis-' trict court for Steele county,) in certain suits therein pending, wherein. James W. Dresser, Wm. M. Hays & Co., Norton & Tuttle, Pope & Baldwin, Bohrer, Morrison & Beeves, John V. Farwell & Co., Kimball, Stevens & Co., J. D. Blake, and other parties, creditors of said Hempel, were plaintiffs, and the said [199]*199Hempel was defendant.” At tbe trial of tbe action of claim and delivery, the defendant therein introduced all tbe writs of attachment in which the plaintiffs’ names are specifically mentioned in the above extract from the answer, and one other in which James W. Dresser and wife were plaintiffs.

It further appears that in addition to these writs of attachments said defendant Wheaton “ held what he claimed to be a writ of attachment in an action pending in said court in which Brown & Smith were plaintiffs, and said Hempel defendant, and that prior to the commencement of the action of claim and delivery he levied the same upon said stock of goods which he claimed to hold under and by virtue of all said writs. The so called writ of attachment in the action brought by Brown & Smith was signed N. M. Donaldson, judge district court fifth district,” but was not signed by the clerk, nor sealed with the seal of the court, or otherwise.

Under the law in force at the time when the pretended writ purports to have been issued, the district judge had authority to allow a writ of attachment. Gen. St., ch, 66, §§ 129, 130. But by section 13, ch. 64, tit. 1, Gen. Stat., the writ was required to be sealed with the seal of the court, and to be signed by the clerk.

Whatever might have been the case if the paper in question had been signed by the clerk, or sealed with the seal of the court of which the clerk is the proper custodian, the signature of the judge without the seal, and without the signature of the clerk, is ineffectual to make it a writ of attachment. While the judge’s signature might be regarded as an allowance of a writ of attachment, it does not make the document signed a writ of attachment for the simple r.eason that the writ is purely statutory, and the statute does not authorize the judge to issue it.

If the writ had been issued by an authorized officer, any [200]*200mere irregularities in tbe manner of issue might have been cured by amendment; but in this case, the pretended writ is as a writ simply void, and of course any levy made under it is incurably void also.

This pretended writ was not introduced in evidence upon the trial of the action of claim and delivery. If it had been offered, it would have been inadmissible, not only because void, but because, not being duly issued out of or under the seal of the court, it was not one of the writs pleaded in the answer either specially or generally.

It further appeared that by arrangement with the various creditors the writs in whose suits were put in evidence in the action of claim and delivery, Philip Wadsworth & Co., who were sureties on the bond aforesaid, paid the several judgments rendered in said suits, together with the costs in the.action of claim and delivery, tbe total amount of said judgments and costs being |11,227.99. No part of the judgment recovered by Brown & Smith has been paid. The plaintiff in this action claims to recover the difference between said sum of 111,227.99, and the judgment recovered in the action of claim and delivery, with interest, or if this cannot be permitted, he claims to recover at least the amount of the Brown & Smith judgment.

The defendants, on the other hand, claim that the effect of the settlement and payment made by Wadsworth & Co., was to extinguish the present plaintiff’s rights under the judgment recovered, by him as defendant in the action of claim and delivery.

In the language of the statute, property is attachable “as security for the satisfaction of such judgment as the plaintiffs (i. e., the plaintiffs in the action in which the attachment issues,) may recover.” Gen. Stat., ch. 66, § § 128,132.' The effect of the levy of an attachment is, then, to vest in the sheriff a special property in the goods attached; and as he has but a [201]*201special property in tbe goods, so be bas bnt a special property in tbe proceeds of tbe goods wben they are converted into money. And whether the conversion of the goods into money arises from a sale thereof as perishable, under section 136, ch. 66, Gen. Stat., or from the collection óf a judgment for the value thereof in an action of claim and delivery is unimportant ; the sheriff in either case holding the proceeds of the goods as security as provided by statute, and by virtue of his special, property therein.

If the goods attached are taken from the sheriff in an action of claim and delivery, and they are returned to him under a judgment in his favor, his property in them is still a special property, and he still holds them in security as in the first place. If, upon being unable to obtain a return of the goods, he recovers their value as fixed in the judgment, he holds such value, and the judgment awarding the same, as security as before, and his property therein is a special property for security purposes.

When it can be ascertained what the value of such special property is, such value should, as against the person holding the general property, be the measure of the amount which the sheriff should be entitled to receive, and recover in case the return of the goods cannot be obtained. La Crosse & Minn. Packet Co. vs. Robertson, 13 Minn. 291; Ib. 120. But there may be cases in which the value of his special property cannot be definitely ascertained at the time when the verdict and judgment in the action of the claim and delivery are rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Minn. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheaton-v-thompson-minn-1873.