24 N.J.L. 150 | N.J. | 1853
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The controversy in this cause arises between the execution creditors of Mackey Williams, and relates to the proceeds of the sale of certain personal property of said Williams, made by the sheriff of the county of Cape May, in the month of December, 1848. At the time of the
The certiorari is accompanied by a written agreement, between the counsel of the different parties, that all formal objections to the proceedings shall be waived; that the judgments, executions, inventories, depositions, rules and orders of the court below shall constitute the state of the case upon which the same shall be argued; that this court shall adjudge both-upon the law and the facts of the case, as if the said several judgments had been originally entered, and all subsequent proceedings thereon had in this court. The case will be considered in accordance with the agreement of the parties. This will account for the apparent anomaly of a review by this court upon certiorari, not only of questions of law but of the merits of the case upon the evidence.
I. The evidence in the cause does not establish actual fraud committed or meditated by the plaintiffs, Fifield and Matthews, in the inception of their judgment. They were wholesale grocers in the city of Philadelphia. The defendant was a country merchant, carrying on business at Dennisville, in the county of Cape-May, and a customer of the plaintiffs. At the date of the bond and warrant of attorney upon which the judgment is entered, it appears in evidence that Williams was indebted to Fifield & Matthews $200 upon a former judgment, and about $960 upon an account current for goods sold and delivered. Either in part payment or as collateral security for
II. The debt itself at the time of-the giving of the bond being justly due, is there anything in the subsequent conduct of the plaintiffs which will render the execution constructively fraudulent? It is insisted that though there be no actual fraud, there is legal fraud sufficient to postpone the plaintiff’s execution.
By an attempt on the part of the plaintiffs at concealment. The alleged concealment consists in an understanding that the matter should not be made public, and in directions given by the plaintiffs to the sheriff that he should not make the execution notorious by going to the house of the defendant to make his levy. Concealment is but a badge of fraud; it may be consistent with fairness and prompted by humanity. In the present instance, the debtor was a merchant, to whose business a public knowledge of his embarrassment must necessarily prove disastrous. The plaintiffs in execution had no possible motive to collude with the defendant to enable him to defraud others. The judgment was on record, the execution was in the sheriff’s hands, open and accessible to every one who desired the information. Whatever may have been the strictness of the common law on this point, I know of no
It is further contended that the conduct of the plaintiff in giving to the sheriff, after making his inventory, an absolute stay of execution, in leaving the property in the hands of the defendant, in permitting him to use, to dispose of it, and to deal with it as his own, renders the execution constructively fraudulent. It is conceded that it would be so at the common law and by the laws of many of the states of the American union. But is it so by the law of this state ?
It has been repeatedly decided, and is the well settled law of this state, in direct contravention of the rule of the common law, that the sheriff is not bound to remove goods levied upon, but may leave them in the actual possession of the defendant till the day of sale. Casher v. Peterson, 1 South. 317; Sterling v. Vancleve, 7 Halst. 285; Cumberland Bank v. Hann, 4 Harr. 166.
It is equally well settled in this state that the plaintiff, when, lie delivers his execution to the sheriff, or at any time after-wards, may direct the sheriff not to proceed to a sale without further orders from him, or unless urged on by younger executions, without thereby losing his priority, provided it be done in good faith. Sterling v. Vancleve, 7 Halst. 285; James v. Burnet, Spencer 635; Cumberland Bank v. Hann, 4 Harr. 166.
The point mainly relied upon to establish the legal fraud of the plaintiffs in the execution is the fact sworn to by the defendant in execution, that the defendant, “ with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiffs in execution, bought and
The seventh proposition resolved by the court in The Cumberland Bank v. Hann was, that “if the defendant is permitted, with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff, express or implied, not only to retain the possession of the property, and to use and enjoy it for its ordinary and appropriate purposes, as in the case of household goods, but to exercise an unlimited control over all the property levied on, whatever may be its value, to use, sell, exchange, or consume it, as the rightful and absolute owner, it is such evidence of a fraudulent and colorable use of the process of the court, whether the debt be a real and just one or not, as to postpone the execution to younger ones sued out and prosecuted, in good faith.”
. It will be conceded, for the purpose of this inquiry, that the evidence of the defendant in execution brings the present case Avithin the principle of the decision in The Cumberland Bank v. Hann, and that, if the seventh resolution of the court in that case be law, the plaintiffs in the present case have lost their priority.
In the case of Woodruff v. Chapin, decided in the Court of Errors and Appeals at January term, 1851, this question was Amry elaborately discussed by counsel and considered by the court. The case was finally decided upon the question of jurisdiction, Avhich precludes the expression by the court of any opinion upon the laAV of the. case.
It is Avell known, however, that a decided majority of the court entertained the opinion, upon the argument of that cause, that the seventh resolution of the Supreme Court in The Cumberland Bank v. Hann is not law, and that the judgment of this court in Woodruff v. Chapin, rendered in
The simple inquiry is, whether permitting a defendant in execution, after the levy, to deal with the property as his own, constitutes a legal fraud, which, without regard to the bona fieles of the transaction, will postpone the execution in favor of a subsequent levy, or whether it simply affords evidence of a fraudulent intent, which may be rebutted.
It must be borne in mind that the principle is well settled in this state, in direct contravention of the rule of the common law, that property taken in execution may be left in the possession and enjoyment of the defendant. If it be consistent with law and with good faith that the execution creditor should permit his debtor to acquire a false credit by holding himself out to the world as the real owner of the property levied upon ; if the creditor may lawfully permit the defendant in execution to use and enjoy the property levied on as his own ; if he may from time to time, for an indefinite period, extend that indulgence, either from motives of humanity or in the hope of securing his debt, though by such means the property levied on be wasted, consumed, or greatly impaired in value, upon what principle can it be maintained that the sale or conversion of any part of the property levied upon by the defendant, in the regular course of his business, ipso facto annuls the execution or avoids the lien. The object of extending indulgence to the debtor, is to allow him an opportunity by his own exertions and the prosecution of his business to pay the debt. But if the property of a man in business, Avhether as a merchant, a manufacturer, or a farmer, be levied upon, he must of necessity, if permitted to pursue his business to any advantage, deal with the property as his own. Goods must be exchanged, the raw material converted into manufactured articles and sold or bartered, the crops of the farm must be gathered and disposed of, the stock must be fed, the labor-*
So by the fourth resolution of the court in The Cumberland Bank v. Hann (4 Harr. 169), it was held, that “if the goods levied upon are left in the defendant’s possession for several years, or an unusual or unreasonable time, and the defendant is permitted to use and enjoy them as before the levy, it may be evidence of a fraudulent intent in law, more or less strong according to the circumstances, and of which the court may judge whenever the question arises.” The same rule must in principle be extended to the sale, exchange, or conversion of part of the property levied on by the defendant. It will amount to evidence more or less strong, according to circumstances, that the execution is kept on foot for fraudulent purposes, but will not per se postpone the execution in favor of a subsequent execution. The rights of a bona fide purchaser of the goods levied upon from the defendant in execution will not be interfered with. If the defendant is permitted, with the assent of the plaintiff, to deal with the property in execution, sales made by the defendant must be held valid as against the lien of the execution. The circumstances in this case do not show that the first execution was kept on foot for fraudulent purposes, and it ought not, therefore, to be postponed in favor of the subsequent executions merely because the debtor, iu pursuit of his regular business, has been permitted to sell, exchange, or convert to bis use portions of the property levied upon.
III. It is further objected that there was no valid levy under the first execution, because the sheriff made the levy without iiaving the property in his view or under his control. The defendant, with the concurrence of the plaintiff, furnished the
In Cliver v. Applegate, 2 South. 480, Justice Southard said the mere fact of the officer’s seeing the goods when he makes the levy, can add nothing to his rights or his responsibilities.
In Wintermute v. Hankinson, 1 Halst. 140, Kirkpatrick, C. J., said the constable must make an inventory, and then only is he considered as taking possession of the goods of the defendant. And Ford, J., said a constructive possession might arise from the defendant’s delivering to the constable an inventory of his goods.
It is well settled in this state that it is not necessary that the goods should be taken into the actual custody of the sheriff, or that they should be removed out of the possession of the defendant. It is enough if there be an inventory made by the sheriff, having the property in his view or under his control. The goods being left in the possession of the defendant, he becomes the bailiff of the officer, and the possession of the defendant the possession of the officer. If the inventory be made with the knowledge and assent of the defendant, if he himself furnish the inventory for the purpose of a levy, the property is transferred to the possession of the officer, and
The decision of this court in The Princeton Bank v. Crozier & Moore, 2 Zab. 383, is limited to a particular species of property ; it does not at all conflict with the views now expressed.
It is clear that the subsequently acquired property is not bound by the levy under the plaintiff’s execution. The proceeds of the sale of that part of the property were rightfully appropriated to the subsequent executions. Matthews v. Warne, 6 Halst. 309; Lloyd v. Wyckoff, 6 Halst. 222; Cook v. Wood, 1 Harr. 254.
The plaintiff’s execution was properly levied upon the standing timber purchased by the defendant, with the right of cutting it within a specified time, under what is termed in the evidence a timber lease. The right of the defendant in that timber was a mere chattel interest. He had no interest in the land further than was necessary to authorize him to sever the timber, and carry it away. Nor was the lien of the plaintiff’s execution lost by the subsequent cutting of the timber, with or without the assent of the plaintiff in execution. The evidence does not show that the wood upon the land included in the timber lease was cut prior to the levy. There is no room,
The receipt of the 2d May, 1848, for $383.61, given by Fifield & Matthews to Williams, on account of the execution, must be credited accordingly. The execution having been so far satisfied, it was not in the power of the plaintiffs, even with the defendant’s consent, by cancelling the receipt to impart new vitality to the judgment, in order to cover subsequent advances, to the prejudice of subsequent execution creditors.
The order of the court below must be in all things affirmed, with costs.
Cited in Clapp v. Ely, 3 Dutcher 598; Kirkpatrick v. Cason, 1 Vr. 332; Dean v. Thatcher, 3 Vr. 475.