5 Blackf. 337 | Ind. | 1840
Burgess caused two writs of domestic attachment to be issued by a justice of the peace against the property of one Fraley, on which various articles of merchandize were taken as belonging to him. /. & J. Atkins, partners, filed a claim to all the property so attached, and a trial of the right thereto was had before a justice of the peace. The case was appealed. In the Circuit Court, the verdict and judgment were' for the claimants. On the trial, Burgess offered evidence that Fraley was a partner of the claimants, and as such was entitled to an undivided interest with them in the attached goods; the Court rejected the testimony, assigning as the reason for so doing, that the constable who served the writs had returned, that he seized all the property as belonging to Fraley, and not that he had attached only his joint share therein.
In considering whether this decision be right or wrong, the first inquiry is, Has a creditor the privilege of laying a domestic attachment on the partnership effects of his absconding debtor ?
The law regulating foreign attachment expressly confers the right to take such effects of a non-resident debtor. R. S. 1838, p. 80. The statute respecting domestic attachment is more general; it authorizes the seizure by that mode, under writs issuing from justices of the peace, of the “ goods, chattels, rights, credits, moneys, or effects” of the debtor, which may be found in the bailiwick of the officer serving the process. R. S. 1838, p. 72. This provision, we think, embraces all the personal property of the debtor, whether held in severalty, or jointly with others. And this construction is favoured by the enactments of the law regulating trials of the right of property, which was in force when the writs of
The next inquiry is, Can the creditor hold the undivided interest of his debtor in the joint properly of a firm, though he cause the whole common stock to be attached as the property of the attachment defendant? We perceive no good reason why he should not do so. Instances may often occur, in which the goods of several owners may seem to belong to an individual, and in which any well meaning and prudent man would seize upon the whole to secure a debt due from the apparent proprietor. Should he happen to make a mistake in this particular, that is surely no cause why he should lose his remedy to the extent of the real interest of his debtor. Such a seizure would not impair the rights of the other joint owners; and it ought not to be interposed to screen the property of the debtor from the just claims of his creditor. Besides, the statute respecting the trial of the right of property contemplates cases in which the claimant may succeed as to part only of the property claimed. Laws of 1834, p. 196. — R. S. 1838, p. 491. The general rule of law is, that in levying an execution against one partner for his separate debt, the officer may take possession of all the joint properly of the firm in order to inventory and appraise it; he has no authority to divide it; but he can only sell the joint interest of the debtor whatever it may be, and the purchaser will stand in the place of the debtor, and hold the same interest in the joint concern which he held. Wats, on Part. 192, 3.—
The Circuit Court erred in rejecting the evidence that Fraley was a partner of the claimants, and jointly interested in the property attached.
The judgment is reversed, and the proceedings subsequent to the appearance of the parties set aside, with costs. Cause remanded, &c.