First State Bank of Hamlin v. Jones

CONNER, C. J.

Appellees, as partners, instituted this suit on the 14th of March, 1908, against appellant First State Bank of Hamlin, a private corporation, and against W. I-I. Hollis, as sheriff of Jones county, and against B. S. Davidson, Ed Kennedy, and C. H. Steele, sureties upon the officer’s bond, to recover damages for the alleged wrongful seizure and conversion of 1,042 cords of wood, alleged to belong to the plaintiffs and to have been wrongfully converted to the use of the defendants, under a writ of attachment, issued at the suit of the First State Bank of Hamlin, against the said F. L. Nixon. Among other things not necessary to notice, the defendants pleaded the general denial, a.nd the sheriff specially that the attachment proceedings against Nixon had been dismissed “and the property levied upon returned to him; that Nixon disclaimed any ownership to the property so attached, and refused to receive the same.” A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellees against all of the appellants in the sum of $2,510, as actual damages, with 6 per cent, interest thereon from March 21, 1908, with verdict and judgment in like amount against the appellant bank in favor of the defendant sheriff and his bondsmen.

One of the appellants’ propositions to an assignment of error complaining of the judgment presents the question of whether appel-lees were entitled to the value, as for a conversion, of all of the wood upon which the writ of attachment was levied, and we have concluded that the evidence fails to show that they were.

The evidence, in substance, shows without dispute that the writ of attachment mentioned was issued at the instance of the appellant bank, in a suit by it against appellee F. L. Nixon; that at the time the writ was received by the officer all of the wood in controversy, except about 150 or '200 cords, was corded upon a railroad right of way, in the town of Hamlin, presumably preparatory to sale and shipment, the remainder being situated in scattered cords in a nearby pasture, where woodcutters had left it. The levy was made by the officer notifying appellee Nixon that -he “had papers for him, and would have to take possession of the wood,” and by making return upon the writ that he had levied the same by taking the wood “into his possession.” It also seems to be undisputed that upon inquiry made one of the officers of the appellant bank stated to the other partner, Jones, that it was not intended to levy upon his interest in the wood, and that he could get his part at any time. Some time thereafter the defendant Nixon in the attachment suit presented a plea in abatement of the action, and also a motion to quash the writ of attachment, because of an alleged insufficiency in the attachment bond. The plea in abatement was sustained, the writ of attachment quashed, and the suit dismissed. It seems further undisputed that during the pendency of the attachment suit nothing was done by the officer in relation to tlje property attached, save that, at the instance of some of the parties, he removed some 50 or 60 cords out of the pasture, where it had been corded, to the right of way, where the larger part was situated, and that to provide for the expense of so doing he disposed of some 10 or 12 cords of the wood.

[1] Revised Statutes 1895, art. 216, so far as pertinent, provides that: “Should the attachment be quashed or otherwise vacated * * * the court shall make the proper order making disposition of the property, or the proceeds of the sale thereof, if the same *673lias been sold under order of the court, directing that it be turned over to the defendant.” B'y this statute it is made the duty of the court to order the return of the attached property, when it yet remains in the custody of the officer, and, of course, of the attaching officer to carry the order into effect. And where the defendant invokes such action there must be a correlated duty on the part of the debtor to receive the property. If, then, in a case coming within the statute, the property be returned to the debtor, or he so elect to receive it, it seems manifest that a suit for conversion cannot thereafter be maintained. The debtor cannot, as in other cases, refuse to receive the property, but is only entitled to recover on account of the wrongful attachment such special damages in the way of loss or deterioration in the value of the property, etc., as has been naturally and proximately caused by the levy and detention. The debtor may thus be afforded adequate compensation for the wrong done him, and this is the prime object of all rules for the measurement of damages. See Hogan v. Kellum, 13 Tex. 396. In this case, as stated. the sheriff pleaded a return of the attached property, but the court evidently proceeded on the theory that there was no evidence in support of the plea, and that hence the conversion alleged was indisputably established; for he peremptorily instructed the jury, to which error is also assigned to the effect that the writ of attachment offered in evidence was unauthorized by law, and that by the term “conversion” was meant,- “where an officer seizes property under a void writ.”

[2] But is this true? We think not. There was an undoubted conversion of the wood sold, for the value of which, with legal interest thereon from the date of the conversion, all appellants are liable; but by far the greater quantity of the wood was at the time of the dissolution of the attachment in the precise condition and situation, so far as the evidence shows, it was when levied upon,' and the evidence, to which we have adverted, at least tends to show, if it does not establish, such return to appellees as the circumstances required. The wood, to whiph we are now referring, while technically taken into the possession of the officer by virtue of the writ, was not actually so done. It was in substance but a levy by a notice to Nixon and by an indorsement on the writ. The actual possession of appellees was not otherwise disturbed. Nevertheless, appellees might doubtless have then, had they seen proper, elected to treat the levy as a conversion; but they did not do so. One of the members of the firm invoked the aid of the court to remove the legal obstacle to the firm’s possession by pressing to a successful termination a plea in abatement of the suit, which necessarily vacated the ancillary writ of attachment and its levy. The necessary legal consequence, which the partner so acting must be held to have had in contemplation, was to restore, free of obstruction, possession of all the wood levied upon that had not been actually seized and converted by the officer, or lost in some way during the pendency of the attachment proceedings.' In Drake on Attachment (7th Ed.) § 228, the law is thus stated: “As the whole office of an attachment is to seize and hold property until it can be subjected to execution, its lien is barren of any beneficial results to the plaintiff, unless he obtain judgment against the defendant, and proceed to subject the property to execution. A judgment for the defendant, therefore, destroys the lien, and remits the parties to their respective positions before the attachment was levied.” It is also said, in Smith & Co. v. Whitfield, 67 Tex. 124, 2 S. W. 822, that (quoting from the headnote): “After the dissolution of an attachment,- the suit remains as if the writ had never issued. All proceedings under the attachment are dissolved, and all liens acquired by it fall with it, and can impart no validity to a lien acquired by a subsequent attachment.” Hence it would seem to be immaterial in the ease under consideration that the court failed to make formal order for the return of the property, as required by the statute we have cited; for it is clear that Nixon knew of the quashal of the writ, and that he had but to ask in order to receive such direction, if deemed necessary.

[3, 4] Had it been made, its execution could have consisted in, nothing other than so notifying one of the partners, and in a cessation on the part of the officer in the assertion of control. In substance, it appears that this is what was actually done. Nixon knew that the levy had been abated, and there is no evidence whatever that thereafter the officer or the appellant bank asserted any kind of right or control. We think, therefore, that it should be held, as matter of law, under the circumstances of this case, that the possession of the partnership was restored, and that the acts of Nixon must be construed as a waiver of the right to treat the levy as a conversion, and as an election on his part to pursue the remedy of recovering possession of his property, ctf which he availed himself, - together with such special damages as may have been caused thereby ; it being considered in this connection that the acts of Nixon in relation to the partnership*--property were binding on the firm, and that a return of possession to him was sufficient. See Gassett v. Sargeant, 26 Vt. 424.

[5-7] The appellants Hollis and sureties prosecute a separate appeal, and insist that they are not liable because of the fact that the writ of attachment was regular on its face, and that hence it could not have been wrongful on the part of the sheriff to make the levy.' We think it sufficient to say as to this, however, that if it be conceded that the writ was voidable only, and not void, and that it was regular on its face, its direction *674was to levy upon the property of the defendant E. L. Nixon, and not upon the property of another. The levy actually made was upon partnership property, without pursuing the method in such cases expressly provided by our statute, requiring that a levy upon an interest of a partner in partnership property shall be made by leaving a notice with one or more of the partners, or with the clerk of the partnership. See Revised Statutes 1895, art. 2352. The levy in any other mode is wrongful. See Currie v. Stuart, 26 S. W. 147. These appellants are therefore liable for the legal consequences, as herein-before stated, of the wrongful levy made.

We conclude that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial in accordance with the conclusions we have announced.