11 Mont. 533 | Mont. | 1892
Counsel have argued in this case upon the question of offsetting one judgment against another. But we understand that the question presented is a different one. The money in this case was in court, belonging to the defendant, as the order of the court recites, with no claims of any class of third persons upon it, as far as we are informed. The plaintiff, as a judgment creditor, asked an order of the court that de
As we understand the doctrine of exemption of money in custodia legis from levy, it is on the ground, among others, “that otherwise a conflict must arise between different officers seeking, in the performance of their duties, to seize the same property.” (Freeman on Executions, § 130.) Despondent cites many authorities in his brief, in reference to money being in the hands of receivers or other officers of the court, upon the point that he makes that such money can be disposed of only by an order of the court, and that the order of the court in this case was authorized by the general powers of a court. Those cases are in point generally, but we observe two cases wherein the facts are practically the same as those at bar, except that the money was in the hands of the sheriff instead of the clerk. (Ex parte Fearle, 13 Mo. 467; 53 Am. Dec. 155, and Dolby v. Mullins, 3 Humph. 437; 39 Am. Dec. 180.) In the Missouri case, the syllabus states the case thus: “A sheriff having in his hands an execution against A, and having received money for him under an execution in which he was plaintiff, although the money before being paid over to A cannot be levied upon, the court may direct it to be paid over upon the execution against him, unless the legal and equitable right to it has passed to some third person.” We mention this statement of the syllabus as a succinct presentation of the point that was decided. Napton, J., in the opinion says: “ The case of Turner v. Fendall, 1 Cranch, 116, seems to hold the doctrine that money in the hands of the officer is not subject to levy, as it is in the custody of the law, and not the property of the plaintiff in the execution. Judge Marshall, however, observes that it is the duty of the officer to seize it the moment it is paid over into the hands of the creditor, and as the payment, under these circumstances, would be a vain ceremony, no court would hesitate to justify the payment in satisfaction of the second execution, or, if the money was brought into court, to direct it to be so paid, unless the legal and equitable right was in some third person.
The Tennessee case, in a more elaborate opinion, holds the same views; but that case goes to the extent of holding that the sheriff, with an execution against A, may levy upon A’s money in his (the sheriff’s) hands, collected upon another execution in favor of A. The facts before us do not require us to pass upon that proposition. "We cite the Tennessee case simply as showing that, if that court would hold that the sheriff might make such a levy, then a fortiori a court, with its judicial powers, could order the disposition of the fund, as it did in the case at bar.
In Turner v. Fendall, supra, Chief Justice Marshall says: “ But the money becomes liable to such execution the instant that it shall be paid into the hands of the creditor; and it then becomes the duty of the officer to seize it. It appears unreasonable that the law should direct a payment under such circumstances. If the money should be seized the instant of its being received by the creditor, then the payment to him seems a vain and useless ceremony, which might well be dispensed with; and if the money should, by being so paid, be withdrawn from the power of the officer, then his own act would put beyond his reach property rendered by law liable to his execution, and which, of consequence, the law made it his duty to seize.”
Notwithstanding the remarks of the court in Turner v. Fendall, quoted above, it was held in that case that the sheriff could not levy upon money already in his hands, made by a levy of an execution in favor of the debtor against whom he held the second execution. But the case before us is different»
Affirmed,