| Mich. | Nov 17, 1886

Chahplin, J.

In 1884 and 1885 the defendant was-sheriff of the county of Wayne.

On the nineteenth of December, 1884, the plaintiffs placed' in his hands for service a writ of attachment issued out of and under the seal of the circuit court of Wayne county,, wherein the plaintiffs in this suit were plaintiffs, and against the goods, chattels, lands, and tenements of Alexander L. Kirby, McElwane Miner, and Lewis H. Agnew, as defendants, which writ was returnable on the fifth day of January, 1885. The writ was based upon a proper affidavit, and was indorsed with security for costs. Upon presenting the writ to the defendant for service, he declined to serve the writ by levying upon certain goods in the store then or lately occupied by Kirby, Miner, and Agnew, unless he was first protected by a bond of indemnity. This bond was given to his satisfaction. He then placed the writ in the hands of his deputy for service.

Plaintiffs’ agent went with this deputy, and pointed out the goods as goods of the defendants in the attachment suit,, upon which he desired the sheriff to levy. These were in a store at No. 292 Woodward avenue, being the store occupied by the defendants in the writ. The goods were in sight, but. the store was locked, and the officer was refused admission.

The officer made no effort to levy upon the goods, but on the thirteenth day of January, 1885, made and filed return *718to the writ that he was unable to find- any property belonging to the defendants in his bailiwick. Plaintiffs afterwards paid the sheriff his fees for services in the attachment suit, but for what amount does not appear. The plaintiffs then brought this action to recover their damages on account of the neglect and failure of the defendant to serve the writ.

On the trial the defendant showed, on cross-examination of plaintiffs’ witness who went with the deputy, and directed him ■on what goods to levy, that Mr. Andrus claimed to be. in possession of the goods as assignee; that he had heard that •an assignment had been made, but he had no actual knowledge thereof. The defendant then proved by said Andrus that he was in possession at the time referred to as the assignee of Miner & Agnew, had the key, and refused ■the sheriff admittance. Defendant then offered in evidence the deed of assignment executed by McElwane’ Miner and Lewis H. Agnew to Frank D. Andrus, dated the eleventh ■day of December, 1884, which- was admitted, against the plaintiffs’ objection of incompetency, irrelevancy, and ■immateriality. The deed, upon its face, purports to be an .assignment of all the assignors’ property, without preference, for the benefit of their creditors.

No bond was offered in evidence, and the plaintiffs’ coun.sel contends that until such bond is filed the title of the goods does not pass to the assignee by the express language ■of the statute, which provides that no such assignment shall be effectual to convey the title to the property of the assignor to the assignee until such bond shall be executed, and filed with and approved by the clerk of the circuit court. How. ■Stat. § 8739.

This section has been considered by this Court in the cases ■of Fuller v. Hasbrouck, 46 Mich. 78" court="Mich." date_filed="1881-04-27" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/fuller-v-hasbrouck-7930288?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="7930288">46 Mich. 78; Coots v. Radford, 47 Mich. 37" court="Mich." date_filed="1881-10-12" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/coots-v-radford-7930436?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="7930436">47 Mich. 37; and in Munson v. Ellis, 58 Mich., 331" court="Mich." date_filed="1885-10-28" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/munson-v-ellis-7932240?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="7932240">58 Mich, 331. In the .last case it was said:

Had no bond been filed, or had it not been filed until *719-•after the expiration of ten days, and not until after creditors had levied, and no proceedings had been.taken in equity to • enforce the trust, we should have been called upon to decide the question whether -the assignment could be assailed at .law.”

But the question was not decided in that case.

Here the assignment was made on the eleventh of Decem'ber. The writ was placed in the sheriff’s hands on the nineteenth, with a proper indemnifying bond. The assignee -had until the expiration of the twenty-first of December in which to file his bond. Failing in that, the sheriff had from ■ the twenty-second of December until the return-day of the writ to make service, by levying upon the goods, for which he • had been indemnified.

It was the duty of the sheriff, under the circumstances, to ■make the levy after the ten days had expired. Neglecting that, it was incumbent, when sued for failure so to do, to , show, by satisfactory evidence, that the property upon which he was directed to levy, and for which he had received indemnity, was not the property of defendants in the writ -of attachment, or of either of them.

If he relied upon the assignment as a transfer of title, it was incumbent upon him to show that a bond was filed, or that creditors had intervened upon the chancery side of the • court to enforce the assignment. This he failed to do. On the contrary, it appears that the plaintiffs introduced in--evidence all the files in the Miner and Agnew case relating to the common-law assignment, and there does not appear . any bond given by the commbn-law assignee among them. ' This the plaintiffs need not have done, but it places the question beyond dispute. If no bond was filed, it is plain the title to the property did not pass to the assignee.

Acreditor of the assignors, after the time given by the statute -to file the bond has expired, has two remedies open to him. He may proceed upon the equity side of the court, to have .the trust carried out through, the intervention of a receiver *720and the supervisory powers of a court of chancery,, or he-may, if no other creditor invokes the aid of chancery, proceed-to enforce his claim against the property of his debtor by levy of attachment or execution, as if the attempted assignment had not been made. He is not obliged, because an attempted assignment has been made, but fails utterly for want of the filing of the required bond, to proceed to enforce-the trusts of the assignment in a court of equity.

The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial is granted..

The other Justices concurred.
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