105 Minn. 295 | Minn. | 1908
This action was brought by Edwin Adams, as the owner of a certain chattel mortgage, against the sureties on the bond of William J. Bodkin, sheriff of Clay county, to recover damages for the conversion of certain grain, which was levied upon by Bodkin as the property of one Marquette. The trial court found that the plaintiff’s mortgage was fraudulent, and ordered judgment for the defendants. The appeal is from that order.
The essential facts are undisputed. On September 8, 1898, Leslie Welter, to whom Marquette was indebted, commenced an action to collect his claim, and caused an attachment to be levied by the sheriff on fifteen hundred fifty three bushels of oats then in a granary on Marquette’s farm, and also upon one hundred sixty bushels of wheat then in an elevator at Baker station. The oats only are involved in this action. Immediately after making the levy on the oats, the sheriff removed them from the granary and stored them in the elevator along with the wheat. Marquette, claiming that he had a good defense to the action and that the writ of attachment had been improvidently issued, employed Adams, who was an attorney at law, to defend the action and attempt to have the attachment dissolved. Being without money to pay his attorney, Marquette, on September 9, 1898, gave Adams a note for $100.35, due December 1, 1898, and secured its payment by the execution and delivery of a chattel mortgage upon certain .grain not involved in this action. Subsequently, on September 16, 1898, the mortgage was satisfied, and in lieu thereof a mortgage was ■given upon the grain, which was then held by the sheriff under the attachment. This mortgage was duly filed. After having been thus ■employed, and his fees secured, Adams commenced proceedings to have the attachment vacated. On September 24, 1898, the district court filed an order dissolving the attachment. From that order an appeal was taken to the supreme court. The appeal was not prosecuted, and on January 3, 1899, the order of the trial court was affirmed. While the appeal was pending, and on December 2, 1898, judgment was entered in the principal action in favor of Welter and against Marquette for $195.47, and the sheriff, who had retained possession of the oats, a stay bond having been given in the appeal, then levied on the oats, and on December 17, 1898, sold the same under an execution is
1. The court found that “the plaintiff’s mortgage was not given in good faith, but in fraud of creditors of the said Marquette, and especially for the purpose of defrauding said Welter.” There was no evidence of actual fraud on the part of Adams, and we are unable to find anything in the circumstances disclosed by this record which justifies the conclusion that the mortgage was not taken in good faith to secure a valid debt. Marquette may have been willing to spend some of his property in defending the action brought by Welter, and it may be that he preferred that the property should go for the payment of other creditors. But his wishes, desires, and intentions cannot be charged to Adams, unless he was a party to an attempt to defraud Marquette’s creditors. Marquette was entitled to employ counsel and defend the action which had been brought against him by Welter. The result showed that the attachment had been improperly issued, and that Marquette was justified in making an effort to have it discharged. He had no money to pay an attorney. Adams was not required to work for nothing, and no one can properly question Marquette’s right to give him a note and secure its payment by a mortgage on the grain, subject to whatever rights had been, acquired by the levy of the attachment. Adams took his mortgage as security for a legitimate debt, but, of course, with knowledge of the attachment.
We attach no particular importance to the fact that the first mortgage given did not cover this grain, and that the present one is the result of a change of the security. If Marquette had the right to give a mortgage on this grain on September 8, he had the same right
2. The respondents contend that the appellant’s claim was barred by the statute of limitations. The action against the sheriff was commenced on December 11, 1901, and, under section 4077, R. L. 1905, if the conversion occurred, as respondents claimed, on September 9, 1898, when the sheriff removed the oats from the granary to the elevator, it was barred. But the appellant’s mortgage was not then in existence. It was taken on September 16, and was subject to the lien of the attachment, which disappeared when the attachment was dissolved. The conversion occurred when the sheriff sold the grain under the execution on December 17, 1898. The action was brought against the sheriff within three years from the time when the cause of action arose, and was, therefore, not barred by the statute. Willius v. Albrecht, 100 Minn. 436, 437, 111 N. W. 387, 112 N. W. 862; Litchfield v. McDonald, 35 Minn. 167, 28 N. W. 191.
The present action against the bondsmen was not commenced until September 7, 1904; but the statute provides that the six-year limitation shall apply to actions “against sureties upon the official bond of any public officer, whether of the state or of any county, town, school district, or municipality therein; in which case the limitation shall not begin to run until the term of such officer for which the bond was given shall have expired.” R. L. 1905, '§ 4076 (8). As the action
The order of .the trial court is therefore reversed, and a new trial granted.