97 Me. 491 | Me. | 1903
This case comes to the law court upon the complainants’ exception to the ruling of the sitting justice sustaining a demurrer to the complainants’ bill in equity.
The complainants base their claim for relief upon these facts, either alleged in the bill, or which, it is agreed may be considered as if alleged. On March 6, 1893, certain real estate, paid for out of the property of the respondent, Fred Tuttle, was conveyed to his wife, Ella M. Tuttle, the other respondent; subsequently the husband
In the case of Stickney and Babcock Coal Company v. Goodwin, 95 Maine, 246, this court decided, following previous decisions of the court upon the same question under a former bankruptcy act, that an attachment of real estate made more than four months prior to the time of filing the petition in bankruptcy, by or against the defendant, is not dissolved by the filing of such petition and the subsequent proceedings in bankruptcy; and that where there is a valid and existing attachment, which has not been dissolved by. the bankruptcy proceedings, the plaintiff may have judgment against the property attached, although the cause of action is provable in bank
This raises the question as to whether or not an attachment can be made of real estate, in a common law action, the legal title to which was never in the defendant but which was paid for out of the property of the husband and conveyed by a third party to the wife for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the husband’s creditors, the suit being commenced by a creditor whose debt existed prior to and at the time of such conveyance.
It is well settled by numerous decisions that where the title to real estate was once in the debtor but has been conveyed by him for the purpose of defrauding his creditors, an attachment may be made and the property subsequently seized upon execution, precisely as if no such conveyance had been made or attempted, a conveyance under these circumstances being regarded as void as to a creditor who was intended to be defrauded. After title has been acquired by the levying creditor, he may maintain an action at law to recover possession of the premises, or he may resort to equity to have the apparent cloud upon his title removed. The right to make a levy upon premises thus fraudulently conveyed being expressly given by statute. K,. S., c. 76, § 14.
It is equally well settled in this State, notwithstanding the provision of It. S., c. 61, § 1, whereby, “when payment was made for property conveyed to her (the wife) from the property of her husband, or it was conveyed by him to her without a valuable consideration, it may be taken as the property of her husband, to pay his debts contracted before such purchase,” that property, the title to which is acquired by the wife by a conveyance from a third person, under these circumstances, can not be taken by levy of execution so as to transfer the legal title to the levying creditor. That is, in cases where the debtor has never had the legal estate, but has paid
Under these circumstances can a prior existing creditor acquire a lien by attachment of the property which will not be affected by bankruptcy proceedings commenced more than four months after such an attachment was made? Or, in other words, can real estate be attached upon mesne process which can not be seized upon the execution issued on the judgment recovered hi the action upon which the attachment was made? The determination of this question necessarily depends upon the statutory provisions in this State.
By B. S., c. 81, §56, “All real estate liable to betaken in execution as provided in chap. 76.; the right to cut and carry away grass and timber from land sold by this State or Massachusetts, the soil of which is not sold; and all other rights and interests in real estate, may be attached on mesne process, and held to satisfy the judgment recovered by the plaintiff; but the officers need not enter on or view the estate to make such attachments.” This language, “and all other rights and interests in real estate,” is very broad and comprehensive, but an examination of the original acts of the Legislature which have been condensed into this clause, shows specifically what rights and interests in real estate were thereby made attachable. In 1829, the Legislature passed an act making the estate, right, title or interest which any person has by virtue of a bond or contract in writing, to a conveyance of real estate, upon condition to be performed, attachable on mesne process. In 1833, an act was passed to the effect that the right which any debtor may have of redeeming from the purchaser any equity of redemption, which may have been sold on execution against such debtor, and also the right which any debtor may have of redeeming from a judgment creditor after levy on execution, were made attachable upon mesne process. These pro
It is a familiar principle that no change of legislative purpose is to be inferred from a mere condensation of prior statutes in a subsequent revision. So that the language of the clause as it now exists in the Revised Statutes, when traced to the original enactments for the purpose of ascertaining its meaning, does not give authority for such an attachment as is here relied upon. And it has been frequently decided that certain interests in land can not be attached, for instance the interest in real estate of a mortgagee. See Smith v. People's Bank, 24 Maine, 185, and a number of later cases. Again, it would hardly be claimed that the right of a widow to have dower assigned to her out of the real estate of her deceased husband, under the law prior to the amendment of 1895, could be attached, although such a right was certainly a valuable interest in real estate. That this right could not be attached was decided in the case of McMahon v. Gray, 150 Mass. 289, 15 Am. St. Rep. 202, 5 L. R. A. 748.
But, we think that a consideration of the purpose of attachment upon mesne process will determine the question. The only object of an attachment is to obtain a lien upon the property attached which will continue until final judgment is obtained, and which may then be enforced by a seizure upon the execution. When a lien is thus acquired by virtue of a valid attachment, the subsequent seizure of the property upon execution, within the time allowed by statute, will relate back to the date of the attachment and take precedence of intervening attachments or conveyances, and this is all that is accomplished by an attachment. It follows that an attachment is valueless unless the lien thus acquired can be subsequently enforced by a seizure of the property upon the execution. As we have seen, the only purpose of the attachment is to acquire a lien that may be subsequently enforced by extending the execution upon the property attached. In fact, the language of the statute is, that the property described, “may be attached upon mesne process, and held to satisfy the judgment recovered by the plaintiff.” This necessarily means, we think, that the property attached may be held to satisfy the judg
In regard to all interests in real estate which have been made attachable by legislative enactment, such as the right to redeem real estate under mortgage, levy, sale on execution, or for taxes, or a right to a conveyance under contract, express provision is made by statute as to the manner of proceeding in the seizure and levy or sale upon execution, 'while in the case of property conveyed by a third person to the wife, and paid for by the husband, no such provision is made, and the court has decided in numerous cases, as we have seen, that a seizure upon execution in such a case can not be made.
We are aware of no statute which gives the right to attach upon mesne process any property which can not be seized upon the execution subsequently obtained, and of no case in which it has been held that such a right exists. Upon the contrary, in Smith v. People’s Bank, 24 Maine, 185, the right to seize upon execution is made the test as to whether or not there is a right to attach. It is there said: “If the interest of a mortgagee can not be taken in satisfaction of an execution, it can not be the subject of attachment upon mesne process.”
There is another reason why, we think, it is apparent that an attachment can not be made in such a case. By R. S., c, 81, § 67, “an attachment of real or personal estate continues for thirty days and no longer, after judgment in the original suit,” except in cases not applicable here. In order to enforce a lien acquired by attachment, a seizure upon the execution must be made within that period of time. What can be done to enforce a lien acquired by attachment, if no seizure can be made upon the execution? How long after judgment in the original suit would such an attachment continue in force, and how would it eventually be dissolved? These suggested difficulties show such an inherent inconsistency in an attachment of an interest in real estate which can not be taken upon execution to satisfy the judgment, that we are forced to the conclusion that an attachment can not be made under these circumstances.
Exceptions overruled. Demurrer sustained.