51 Vt. 140 | Vt. | 1878
The opinion of the court was delivered by
' The plaintiff, as deputy sheriff, on the 3d day of October, 1876, attached upon a writ in favor of Darling & Ricker, against one R. Gr. Beattie, the property in question, consisting of hay and oats in the straw, by leaving a copy of said writ and attachment in the town clerk’s office in Ryegate, the town wherein said property was taken.
On the 29th day of November following, the defendant, as deputy sheriff, upon a writ in favor of D. H. and T. Gr. Beattie against the same debtor, attached a quantity of straw, the same hay described in said first attachment, and a quantity of threshed oats in the granary of said debtor, (he having threshed the oats in the straw attached by the plaintiff, and removed the same to said granary,) by leaving a copy of said writ and attachment in said town clerk’s office. The straw so attempted to be attached was the same straw containing the oats attached by the plaintiff as aforesaid. The oats were removed by the defendant at the time of their attachment, from the debtor’s premises.
On or about the 6th: day of December following, the suit in fa
Application was made to the defendant by the debtor to have said pi’operty appraised and sold on the writ served by him ; and on the 12th day pf December the defendant went to the barn where said hay was kept, and showed it to the appraisers appointed to appraise the same, and such proceedings were had that the hay, straw, and oats were duly appraised, advertised, and sold on said last-named writ by the defendant, on the 23d day of January, A. D. 1877.
On the 29th day of December, A. D. 1876, the plaintiff attempted to make another attachment of said hay and unthreshed oats upon a writ in favor of the National Bank of Newbury against the said Robert G. Beattie, by leaving a copy of said writ and attachment in said town clerk’s office; and also, on the 6th day of January made still another attachment of the same property in favor of one M.
This is an action of trespass and trover for the hay, oats and straw attached as aforesaid.
It is claimed by the plaintiff that inasmuch as, there was a valid subsisting attachment upon the property in question by him as deputy sheriff at the time the attachment was made by the defendant, the attachment of the latter was absolutely void, and no lien was then or thereafter acquired thereby upon said property.
It has been repeatedly held that property attached by an officer by leaving a copy of the writ and attachment in the town clerk’s office, is in the constructive possession of such officer'. Therefore, at the time of the attachment of the property in question by the defendant, such property was in the constructive possession of the plaintiff, and no lien upon the same was thereby acquired by the defendant as against the plaintiff or Darling and Ricker; but the moment the suit of the latter was discontinued, their lien thereon was discharged, and the constructive- possession of the property aforesaid by the plaintiff ceased.
The property, except the oats, was all this time up to the day of the sale in the actual possession of the debtor, and if the defen
We are not aware that this exact question has ever been before this court until now; but a similar one, as to the validity of a subsequent attachment made by an officer other than the one making the first attachment, where the lien created by the first attachment continued in force or the property had been sold upon execution, has been frequently before the court. It has been repeatedly held that such subsequent attachment is invalid, for the reason that no valid attachment of personal property can be made by an officer without taking actual or constructive possession of the same. By leaving a copy of the attachment in the town clerk’s office, an officer acquires-the constructive possession of the property attached. There can be no joint possession of such property by officers making different attachments. The constructive or actual possession of the same by the officer making the first attachment excludes the possession of other officers making or attempting to make subsequent attachments. But cessante ratione legis cessat ipsa lex. When the constructive possession of the property in question acquired by the plaintiff by the first attachment ceased, its effect upon the second attachment made by the defendant also ceased; and his attachment, which up to that time had been kept in abeyance, became operative and in force; and thereafter the constructive possession of said property except the oats was in the defendant until he took the actual possession of the same and sold it, as above stated.
Therefore the plaintiff never acquired any valid lien upon the property in question by virtue of his subsequent attachment, as against the defendant; and as the lien acquired by virtue of his,