1 Bond 422 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio | 1860
OPINION OF
The questions before the court arise on a motion to dissolve the injunction, which has been granted in this case, and to rescind the order for the appointment of a receiver. For obvious reasons it will be improper, in the decision of this motion, to pass on any questions of law or fact directly involving the title to the property in controversy, and which will necessarily come under the consideration of the court on the final hearing.
The bill in chancery in this case was filed on the 4th of January, instant, by David Crane, a citizen of the state of Tennessee. It states, in effect, that on the 1st inst he purchased twelve hundred and twenty-four barrels of apples, and three hundred and thirty-two barrels of onions of D. Harper &'Son, commission and produce merchants of Cincinnati, for the sum of §2,429.31, for which he gave his two negotiable promissory notes for equal amounts, payable in thirty and sixty days; that he was in possession of said articles, and had shipped a part of the apples to Nashville, his place of business, and had sold a few barrels in Cincinnati; that on the 2d of January, W. G. McCoy and Roswell Gould sued out of the superior court of Cincinnati a writ of replevin against D. Harper & Son, upon which the sheriff of Hamilton county took one thousand one hundred and seventy barrels of said apples and delivered them to said McCoy and Gould; that said Crane thereupon sued out of this court a writ of replevin for said applies against said McCoy and Gould, and they were taken by the marshal and were in his possession when Libbeus L. Harding obtained a writ of re-plevin from said superior court of Cincinnati against said Crane and Lewis W. Sifford, the marshal, and that by the aid of a posse, and by forcible means, the sheriff of Hamilton county intervened to prevent the delivery of said property by the marshal to the said Crane; that a collision had already occurred between the marshal and the sheriff, and that bloodshed was anticipated in the attempt by the marshal to retain possession, and the attempt of the sheriff to deliver the property to said Harding. The bill further alleges, that the purchase by said Crane of Harper & Son was in good faith, and for a full consideration; that said Harding has no just claim to the property and never was in
The defendants have filed their motion to dissolve the injunction, and to rescind the order for the appointment of a receiver. The grounds of this motion are substantially: 1. That the court had no jurisdiction to award an injunction, and appoint a receiver; 2. That there was neither in law nor in fact any conflict between the marshal and the sheriff, rendering the interposition of this court proper or necessary; 3. That the sheriff has lawfully a right of possession, as against the marshal and the complainant Crane. In adverting to these grounds for dissolving this injunction, it will not be necessary, and perhaps would be improper, on this preliminary motion, to attempt minutely to consider all the facts ■'¡resented to the court by the affidavits and exhibits in the case. The questions presented as to the title to this property will come more properly before the court on the final hearing, and can not now be satisfactorily settled on the ex parte evidence presented by the parties. If the judge, in the just exercises of his powers as a chancellor, had jurisdiction to make the order in question, and a case is made, which, prima facie, justified the allowance of an injunction, and the facts now before the court require, for the purposes of .equity, that the injunction should not be dissolved, the present motion can not prevail.
If, as insisted by the defendants’ counsel, the judge had no rightful jurisdiction to make the order in question, the injunction must be dissolved. The objection on this ground is that the complainant had an adequate remedy at law, in the action of replevin which was pending, or by ah action of trespass against the plaintiff in the action of replevin, and the sheriff who executed the process, if they were wrong-doers. The sixteenth section of the judiciary act of 17S9 (1 Stat. 82) prohibits suits in equity where there is a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law.
But it is further insisted in support of the - present motion, that this court had full pow-: .■er, as a court of law, to enforce its own process, and protect its officers .in the execution ■of that process. There is no doubt of the existence of this power in this court. If its officer is obstructed or interfered with in the just exercise of his duties, the court may interpose and punish such unwarranted interference, as a contempt of its authority. But, for many obvious reasons, the exertion of this power is to be avoided, unless there is the most stringent necessity for it. And especially is this true, when the conflict of authority may involve the courts of the Union and the courts of. a state in embarrassing and unpleasant collisions.
' I will, however, pursue this subject no further. I am clear in the opinion, that in view of the facts of this case, as set forth in the complainant’s bill, and as they appear from the affidavits and exhibits in the case, the order for the injunction was a proper exercise of a jurisdiction pertaining to a judge of this court, in the exercise of his powers as a chancellor. And In this connection, I may properly notice the fact, that his honor, •Judge McLean, on one occasion within my recollection, strongly stated it as his opinion, that as a general rule‘in these conflicts of jurisdiction involving the right to the title and possession of property, the remedy afforded by a court of equity is greatly to be preferred to protracted and vexatious litiga-tions at law. The views thus presented, are upon the assumption that the marshal, at the •time the sheriff attempted to serve the writ •of replevin sued out ■ by Harding against Grane and Sifford, was in the lawful possession of the property in question, and that the sheriff, therefore, had no right to seize it on the process in his hands; and that h':s attempt to seize it, under the circumstances referred to, and in view of the probable results of his action, presented a state of affairs rendering it proper and necessary for Crane to resort to chancery, and justifying the order of the court made in the case. It is insisted, however, by the counsel for tne defendants, that there is nothing in the facts before the court from which the inference can be fairly drawn, that there was any actual conflict as between the marshal and the sheriff. It is argued, that the property, when the sheriff attempted to serve the writ of replevin sued out by Harding, was in the possession of Crane, and not of the marshal, and therefore subject to seizure by the sheriff under the writ in his hands. If this proposition' is sustainable, it is clear the sheriff had ■a right to take the property, and the marshal was wrong in making any opposition to it. If,' on the other hand, the property was legally in the possession of the marshal under the .writ of replevin issued from this' court in. the case of Crane against Gould and McCoy, the sheriff had no right to disturb or in any way interfere with the marshal’s possession. How stands the fact as to the possession of this property at the time the sheriff attempted to serve the writ of replevin? The return to the. writ issued from-this -court, in the case of Crane against Gould and McCoy,
It is insisted, however, that by operation of the statute of Ohio, upon Crane’s giving bond to the marshal, the property replevied passed into the possession of Crane, and was therefore subject to the operation of the sheriff’s writ of replevin. On this point no authorities were cited, and it may be presumed there are none to sustain the position. In the absence of any.authoritative decisions to the contrary, I incline to the opinion that after the bond is given and accepted by the officer, there must be a formal delivery of the property by the officer. The return of the officer before referred to, shows only a delivery of seventy-five barrels of the apples. It is insisted in argument, that this partial delivery by the marshal is by implication to be deemed as a delivery of all the apples to Crane, and that the possession thereby passed to him. and was subject to the action of the writ of replevin sued out by Harding, and it is also contended that the giving the delivery bond by Crane, and its acceptance by the marshal, transferred the possession to Crane. The return of the marshal showing possession in him of all the apples, except the seventy-five barrels delivered to Crane, is to bs viewed as conclusive of that fact, and the point referred to is not material in the decision upon the question before the court. It was no doubt competent for the marshal to have delivered the entire quantity of the apples in bulk, as they there remained in the warehouse. But was he bound to make the delivery in this way? It occurs to me, that it was in the discretion of the officer in wnac manner the delivery should oe made, and in the exercise of this discretion he was properly controlled by the circumstances of the case. It appears that Crane was prepared to remove the apples to the river landing for the purpose of shipment, and drays were in readiness to take them. The marshal seems to have thought it was his duty to deliver them on the pavement, in front of the warehouse. I am unable to perceive that there can be any legal objections to this mode of delivery, having regard to the facts existing and known to the marshal. These facts warranted the apprehension, that there might be, and probably would be, some interference in the attempt to give the possession to the claimant of the property.
The doctrine that where there is concurrent jurisdiction in courts, the court first obtaining jurisdiction of the subject or person shall retain it, is not controverted, and is too well settled to be disputed. This doctrine applies clearly to the case under consideration. There was a legal possession in the marshal of that portion of the property in question, of which there had been no actual delivery to Crane. That possession could not be rightfully interfered with or disturbed by process from another court; and the property was subject to any order which the court having it in possession, might deem it proper to make, in accordance with law and the usages of courts. The application for the appointment of a receiver is always addressed to the sound discretion of the court to which it is made. As a general rule, such appointment will be made in all cases where the interests of parties seem to require it. The posture of this controversy, before referred to, a conflict existing, with an apprehended violent collision, and a' probability of fierce and long continued litigation at law, was a sufficient reason for the appointment of a receiver, and the order for the injunction. But in addition to this consideration, the perishable nature of the property in contestation could not be overlooked. The apples were liable to rapid decay, and if they were to be the sport of interminable struggles for possession, and cross actions of replevin, before these could be ended, they would be entirely valueless. Hence, it would seem obviously to be for the interest of all concerned, that they should be withdrawn from the operation of such a warfare, and disposed of in a way most advantageous to all. The order for the appointment of a receiver, who has taken an oath for the faithful discharge of his duties, with the superadded security of a bond, amply secures this object. In the meantime, all the questions of title to this property are reserved until there can be a full and final hearing, and a satisfactory decision settling the rights of the parties. The order of the court requires the proceeds of the property to be placed under its order, and it will be paid to those who establish a legal right to it
Upon the whole, I see no sufficient reason for dissolving the injunction, or vacating the order for the appointment of a receiver. The motion is therefore overruled.