80 P. 823 | Wyo. | 1905
This is an action of replevin brought in the District Court, Big Horn County, for the possession of four cows described iu the petition. The suit was brought by Harris E. Cheese-man against John J. Fenton, sheriff of Big Horn County; William Arnold, a deputy sheriff, and Joseph Cline. The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of the property, and that the same is wrongfully, illegally and fraudulently detained by the de-. fendant Arnold. The answer is a general denial. Upon the trial of the action before the court without a jury, the finding was for the defendants, and that they had the right of property and possession at the commencement of the action, and judgment was rendered in'their favor and against the plaintiff and his surety for $120, the value of the property, and costs. The plaintiff and his surety bring the cause here on error, assigning as error the rendition of the judgment and the overruling of the motion for new trial. The writ of replevin is not in the record, nor the undertaking, but the judgment indicates that the property was taken upon the writ and delivered to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff testified that he was the owner of the property in controversy at the time of the commencement of the suit, and that he bought the same from the First National Bank of Meeteetse, Wyoming, at a sale upon foreclosure of a chattel mortgage; and enough appears to show that the chattel mortgage referred to was one executed to said bank
An offer by the plaintiff on rebuttal to show that the bank had been in possession of the cattle under a bill of sale from the Stephensons was excluded. None of the foreclosure proceedings were shown except the time and place of sale; and it appeared that the sale had not taken place in view of the property, nor in lieu thereof, at the court house, as provided by statute. (R. S. 1899, Sec. 2825.) In the absence of proof that the sale occurred under a mortgage authorizing it, and covering the property in suit, and it appearing that the sale had not occurred in the manner required by law, the plaintiff failed to establish title in himself, except, perhaps, such title as may be presumed from possession. But it is contended that, as the property was taken from him when he was in possession, claiming ownership, he had a right to such possession as against defendants, who, it is further contended, failed to show any right of property or possession.
The evidence as to plaintiff’s possession is not very satisfactory. He testified that when he bought the cows they were upon his ranch, and as his possession of them at that time is not disputed, it was doubtless assumed, and we may assume that he was then, and immediately^ after his alleged purchase, in possession. There is no direct evidence that such possession continued until the property was taken upon the attachment writ under which defendants claimed, and that fact is not proven unless the rule be applied that where
The evidence upon that subject consisted solely of certain proceedings in attachment before C. W. McNair, a justice of the peace, wherein one Joe Cline was plaintiff, and Musa B. and Robert B. Stephenson were defendants, the plaintiff seeking to recover a judgment for $152.90. The sufficiency^ of the showing as to those proceedings to sustain the judgment rendered by the justice, and to constitute a valid attachment of the property, or to establish any right in the defendants, is challenged by the plaintiffs in error.
It appears that on July 13, 1903, Cline, the plaintiff in that suit, filed a petition, an affidavit for attachment, and an undertaking in attachment, and that on July 14, 1903, the justice issued a writ of attachment making it returnable; July 17, 1903, and that it was returned and filed July 15," 1903. The writ of attachment appeared to have been lost, and there was no proof of its contents, nor whether an in-’ ventory of any property attached was made and returned with the writ. The justice’s docket does not state to whát' officer the writ was delivered, as required by Section 4430,
However, there is an entire absence of proof that the property in question was ever taken under the execution. Hence, it furnishes no justification to Arnold or either of the defendants.
Neither of the defendants testified in the case, but a witness on their behalf, who had been attorney for the plaintiff in the attachment suit, testified without objection that the officer, without naming him; had levied the writ of attachment upon the cows in dispute, in addition, it seems, to other property, and that he took possession thereof July 16, 1903, and kept them until the)^ were taken from him by replevin: but the witness did not explain whether he referred to the replevin writ in-this action or some other. The witness testified on cross-exam'ination that his knowledge of the fact
Having failed, therefore, to connect themselves with the possession of the officer under the writ of' attachment, the defendants were not entitled to a judgment for the value of the property, on the theory that it was less than the value of the writ, for the defendant in possession may not have held the property under that writ. Assuming that plaintiff had not shown any right to possession, the defendant from whom the property was taken under the replevin writ might possibly, if there were no other defects in the case for the defense, have been entitled to a judgment for costs; but not for the value of the property, unless it had been shown that he had taken it and held it by virtue of the writ of attachment.
Further, as above stated, it appeared that the ■ officer, whoever he may have been, took possession of the property under the writ July 16, 1903. By the docket entry of the justice, the writ had been returned and filed the day pre
On the ground, however, that the evidence does not connect the possession of either of the defendants, if either had possession, with the writ of attachment, we are of opinion that the court was not justified in awarding- the defendants a judgment for the value of the property, and that the judgment for that reason must be reversed; there having-been no other right of possession shown on the part of the defendants.
As the action must be remanded for new trial, there are some other important questions which we think may properly be considered to the end that another trial may be had upon what seems to us to be the principles applicable to the case.
The jurisdiction of the justice to issue the writ of attachment is questioned. That question maj'- become pertinent in the event that plaintiff be shown to have been ih possession ' claiming ownership, when the attachment was levied. The rule is that where an officer seizes property under an attachment writ which is in' the possession of a stranger to the attachment suit under claim of ownership, it is incumbent on the officer, when sued in replevin by such person for a recovery of the property, to show not only a writ valid on its face, but the regularity of the attachment proceedings. (Jones v. McQueen, 45 Pac., 202 (Utah); Drake on Attachment, Sec. 185a; Thornburgh v. Hand, 7 Cal., 554; Horn v. Corrarubias, 51 Cal., 524; Mathews v. Densmore, 43 Mich., 461; Van Etten v.
• In the case at bar, if the plaintiff was in possession of the property under a purchase at a foreclosure sale, it cannot concern the defendants whether the sale was lawfully conducted or not, or whether in point of fact the property was covered by the,., mortgage under which the sale occurred, unless they have acquired some right in or lien upon the property, authorizing- them to assail plaintiff’s title. A mere stranger, one without any sort of claim to the property, would clearly have been unauthorized to take it away from the plaintiff, and retain it, on the ground that the plaintiff’s purchase gave him no title.
It was incumbent upon the defendants, upon the theory that plaintiff’s possession under claim of title, had been
The proceedings before the justice, as shown by the papers and docket entries, were as follows: July 13, 1903, plaintiff therein filed a petition, affidavit for attachment, and an undertaking. A writ of attachment was issued July 14, 1903, returnable July 17, 1903, at four o’clock p. m., returned and filed July 15, 1903. At four o’clock July 17, 1903, the attorney for plaintiff appeared and entered a motion for an order for service by publication, upon the ground that defendants were without the state, and personal service could not be had; the motion was granted and the case again set for hearing August 10, 1903, at ten o’clock a. m. On August 10, 1903, at ten o’clock a. m., affidavit of service by publication was presented and filed, found to be legal and in due form; and at eleven o’clock, one full hour after the time set for hearing, defendants failed to appear and were declared to be in default. Plaintiff introduced his evidence, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the full amount of his claim and costs, and it was ordered “that the attached goods and chattels be sold to satisfy the judgment.”
There is a docket entry to the effect that on September 4, 1903, an execution was issued and delivered to William Arnold, deputy sheriff. It does not appear by the docket that the execution had been returned, nor what had been done under it, though the justice testified that it had not been returned.
Civil actions before justices of the peace are required to be commenced by summons, or by the appearance of the
Upon certain grounds specified in the statute the plaintiff hv following the prescribed procedure may have a' writ of attachment in a civil action before a justice of the peace, at the time or after the commencement thereof. (Id., Sec. 4452.) If the writ of attachment is issued at the commencement of the suit, it is required to contain the substance of a summons, and no separate summons is necessary. If issued after the summons, the writ must be made returnable at the same time as the summons. (Id., Sec. 4478.) When the defendant cannot be summoned, and his property or effects shall be attached, if he do not appear, the justice is required to enter an order in his docket, requiring the plaintiff to give notice to the defendant by publication in a newspaper or by posting, as set forth in the statute. (Id., Sec. 4481.)
The section of the Revised Statutes last above cited contains a misprint of one provision as originally enacted, which error is found in every compilation and revision, since the act was originally passed. In the revision it reads, “if he do not appear to the action of the return writ,” referring to the want of appearance on the part of defendant. It originally read, and no doubt is to be so understood, “if he do not appear to the action at the return of the writ.” (Laws 1871, p. 58, Sec. 154.)
A writ, of attachment is thus authorized to be issued by a justice of the peace only at or after the commencement of a
The statute expressty requires the writ to contain the substance of a summons when issued at the commencement of the action. That is a jurisdictional requirement. Where a summons has not already been issued in the case, the justice has no authority to issue a writ of attachment unless the writ itself shall contain the substance of a summons. Otherwise no action would be commenced, and an attachment is not authorized except at or after the commencement of an action.
It is argued that, as the defendants were out of the state, and personal service- of summons was, therefore, impossible, the issuance of a summons would have been useless, and that a summons is not necessary when service is to be obtained by publication or by posting notices, as required by 'Section 4481, Revised Statutes. It might be a sufficient answer to say that the statute expressly requires that a summons be issued either separately or embraced in the writ to constitute the commencement of action, and that without an action previously commenced, or concurrently with the issuance of the writ of attachment, no jurisdiction exists for its issuance.
But the statute will not bear the construction contended for. It is only after property of a defendant has been attached, and his failure to appear at the return of the writ, the writ referred to being the summons or the attachment
The statute provides: ‘‘When a defendant cannot be summoned, and his property or effects shall be attached, if he does not appear,” etc., “the justice shall enter an order in his docket” for notice to be given as therein specified. How is it to be determined that the defendant cannot be summoned? Clearly, we think, by the officer’s return upon the summons or writ, as the case may be, since no other source of information is provided for. The publication thereafter and proof thereof operates to give the justice jurisdiction, but it does not in all respects take the place of a summons. The suit is not authorized to be commenced by the publication, nor by the order therefor, but by a summons. The evidence in the case, therefore, was insufficient to show a valid writ of attachment.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. Reversed and remanded.