Langdon & Co. v. Brumby

COLLIER, C. J.

— In the P. & M. Bank v. Willis & Co. S Ala. Rep. 770, it was held, that although the statute directed the Court to require the parties to make up an issue, under such rules as it might prescribe for the trial of the question of right, yet the only proper issue in all such cases was an affirmation on the part of the plaintiff, that the property levied on was subject to the execution, and a denial of that fact by the claimant. In the present case, an issue was thus formed, and the claimant was then allowed to plead, that the property was not subject to the plaintiff’s execution, for certain reasons, which are specially stated. The effect of this plea was to prevent a trial upon the general question of the liability of the apparatus, to the satisfaction of the plaintiffs execution, and limit the inquiries to a single point, either of law or fact, according as the plaintiff might elect to treat it. This could not be done by^ny proceeding interposed by the claimant. The statute entitled the plaintiff to a jury trial, if the cause was in Court in a condition to be tried, and the case cited, shows how the' issue shall be framed. Here the Court determined that the levy of the execution did not entitle the plaintiff to a trial of the right of property, and rendered a judgment against him for costs.

It is no answer to this view to say, the facts set forth in the plea, if true, show that the property in question is not liable to the plaintiff’s execution, and that the demurrer is an admission of their truth. A demurrer admits the truth of the facts, if well pleaded, but presents to the Court the decision of their legal sufficiency to bar the action, and the question whether they are interposed in such a manner as to make them available. If the determination be favorable to the party demurring upon either of these points, the plea should be adjudged bad. We have seen that the plea, irrespective of its extrinsic merits, could not be entertained.

*56In Rives & Owen v. Willborne, 6 Ala. Rep, 45, an execution was levied on a slave, a claim made by a third person, and a bond given to try the right. The cause Was tried by a jury upon an issue in the usual form. On the trial, the claimant proved that some months previous to the levy of the execution the slave in question was seized under three attachments, and replevy bonds given for his forthcoming according to law. In these bonds the claimant was a surety, and as such interposed his claim to arrest a sale under the execution. The Circuit Court charged the jury, that the slave when levied on was in custody of the law by virtue of the levy of the attachments and proceedings thereon; and consequently was not subject to the levy of the execution when it was made.

In the case cited it appears, that judgments were rendered in the suits commenced by attachment two weeks previous to the levy of the execution, but it was not shown that any proceedings had been had on the judgments. This Court laid no stress upon the proceedings had in the attachment, subsequent to the execution of the replevy bonds, but considering that the effect of these was to withdraw the slave from a liability to seizure and sale, affirmed the judgment of the Court below.

If the special plea and replication state the facts of this case correctly, it differs from Rives & Owen v. Willborne, in tl^jg — > here, the process under which the property was levied on, created a prior lien to that under which the levy had been made, and bond previously given to try the right; there, the claim had been interposed to stop a sale and try the right, upon the ground that the property had been placed in the custody of the law in virtue of proceedings which operated a paramount lien.

By the second section of the act of IS3S, “ relative to the satisfaction of executions,” it is enacted, that “the lien created by the delivery of an execution from a Court of record to the sheriff, shall continue to bind the property of the defendant as between different judgment creditors in the Courts of record in this State, in the following manner, viz : if a term shall elapse after the return of the first execution, before an alias shall be be sued out and delivered to the sheriff, the lien created by the delivery of the first writ of execution, shall be cancelled and of no avail; but if a term shall not have elapsed, and the aliag *57shall be delivered to the sheriff before the sale of property, under a junior execution in favor of another creditor, the lien shall continue, notwithstanding the alias may not have been delivered until after such junior execution; but if such alias shall not be delivered, until after the sale under such junior execution, the lien of the latter shall prevail.” [Clay’s Dig. 209, § 43.] The eighth section of the act of 1807, “concerning executions, &c.,” declares that a fieri facias or other writ of execution, shall only bind the property of the-goods against which such writ is sued forth, from the time such writ shall be delivered to the sheriff, &c. [Clay’s Dig. 208, § 41.]

The view we have taken of the plea as applied to the present case, will relieve us from the necessity of giving to thp replication a critical examination; and without inquiring whether the plaintiff’s execution exerted a lien paramount to’that of Crawford’s, we will consider the question in hand, upon the hypothesis that such was its effect.

By the common law, the goods of a party against whom a fieri facias issued, were bound as against the parly himself, and all claiming by assignment from, or by representation under him, from the test of the rvrit. The act of 1S07, did not create the right of lien, but rather limited its retrospective operation, by declaring that it should only become effective from the time the writ is placed in the sheriff’s hands. This lien is a right so much respected by the law, that where it once attaches it will not be divested, though the property of the debt- or has been seized under a previous execution. And although the original execution may not have been levied, yet if the plaintiff continues its efficacy by causing an alias, &c., to be regularly issued from term to term, his lien overreaches a fieri facias of a younger date, which has been actually levied, and if in the sheriff’s, hands will be entitled to the proceeds of the sale.

In the case before us, if the plaintiff’s execution first operated a lien upon the estate of the defendant in execution, then they would be entitled to the proceeds of the property in question, if they caused it to be regularly issued as the act of 1828 requires, should Crawford succeed in condemning it. The claimant, by the terms of his bond, stipulated for the return of *58the property-, in the event that he was unsuccessful in the assertion of his claim. Notwithstanding these positive terms, the claimant would not be held to a performance of the condition of his bond, if the property should be wrested from his possession by the authority of law, which he could not control. This principle would apply where the property was seized under an execution, which exerted a superior lien. Of course, this reasoning is founded upon the supposition, that the goods in dispute belonged to the debtor: for if they were the claimants, neither of the execution creditors, could insist upon their appropriation. From this view of the law it results, that although goods are levied on by a junior execution, and delivered to a claimant, who has interposed a claim and given bond with surety as required by law, yet such proceeding will not prevent the levy of a fieri facias, the lien of which commenced fi\-st and still continues.

The same principles will not apply where the senior fieri facias is first levied, and under' it, proceedings are instituted to try a claim. There it would be no answer for the claimant to say, that the goods had been taken from his custody by a junior execution; and, in such case, if he were unwilling or unable to interpose a second claim, he would be answerable upon his bond if they should bo condemned, and he could not not produce them.

In respect to the case of Rives & Owen v. Wilborne, speaking for myself alone, I would remark that I have bestowed much reflection upon the principle upon which it rests. I have frequently thought and conversed about it since the decision of Hagan v. Lucas, 10 Pet. Rep. 400. I have examined our statutes in respect to the trial of the right of property — I have scanned the arguments that have suggested themselves to me, or have been urged by others, both for and against that case; and am free to declare that on either side they are potent and embarrassing. In favor of it, it is said that the opposite conclusion would be oppressive and sometimes utterly destructive of the rights of the honest claimant; against it, is said, that it enables the debtor by a combination with a third person to interpose a claim through dishonest motives, only to withdraw the property from the just demands of the creditors. In this equilibrium of the argument upon consequences, the safe *59course is to consult the written law, the nature, design and character of the proceeding for which it provides, and regulates. If untrammelled by legislation, I have no doubt, but rules upon this subject might be laid down, embracing a more enlarged equity, and more generally promotive of justice. But keeping in view our statutes, I am persuaded that the case referred to, is, as consonant to the provisions as any decision we would be likely to make, if the question were res integra. I have not, therefore, the slightest wish to prescribe any other limitation upon the general terms in which we have heretofore expressed ourselves, than that already stated in this opinion.

. Without stopping to recapitulate, it is enough to add, that the judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded.