186 P. 249 | Idaho | 1919
This is an appeal from a judgment fixing the order of priority or'preference in which certain judgments against the Musgrove Mining Company should be paid.
One Bascomb sued the company in the probate court and attached its property on January 4, 1916. All of the other actions were commenced after the Bascomb attachment was run. The district court’s judgment is that Bascomb’s judgment should be paid in full, the property having been sold for more than enough to satisfy it. Under the decision of this court in Kimball v. Raymond, 9 Idaho, 176, 72 Pac. 957, to the effect that the provisions of C. S., sec. 6781, providing for the prorating of the proceeds of property attached, do not apply to- the justice court practice of this state, Bascomb would not be required to submit to the prorating provision thereof.
On January 6, 1916, respondent Greene filed two actions in the district court and within two days thereafter proper notice of attachment, as required by sec. 6781, supra, was given. Within sixty days after the first posting and publication of this attachment, a number of' other actions were commenced, some in the probate and some in the district court, and prosecuted to final judgment. Some of the probate judg
The specification of error, a determination of which will dispose of the - ease, is that the judgment from which this appeal is taken and which, as above noted, fixed the order of priority or preference in which the various judgments should be paid, is contrary to law, the contention being that under the provision of C. S., sec. 6781, all of the judgment creditors were entitled to prorate, the property having sold under execution for an amount less than that sufficient to satisfy all claims in full.
The portion of the statute which is involved reads as follows : “Any creditor of the defendant, who, within sixty days after the first posting and publication of such notice, shall commence and prosecute to final judgment his action for his claim against the defendant, shall share pro rata with the attaching creditor in the proceeds of defendant’s property where there is not sufficient to pay all judgments in full against him.”
If this statute is valid, the judgment cannot be upheld, for it appears on the face thereof that notwithstanding the fact that all of the actions affected by the judgment appealed from were commenced and prosecuted to final judgment within sixty days after the first attachment was run in the district court, the judgment creditors are not permitted by the terms thereof to prorate in the proceeds of the attached property, but the order is that the respective judgments shall each be paid in full in the order of priority or preference fixed therein.
The validity of this statute has never been expressly pdssed upon. The only decisions directly affecting it are Kimball v. Raymond, supra, and Howard v. Grimes Pass Placer Mining Co., 21 Ida. 12, Ann. Cas. 1913C, 284, 120 Pac. 170.
In the latter ease this court expressly refused to pass upon the validity of the statute, for the reason that the question was not properly before it, and confined its decision to the point that those creditors, who did not prosecute their claims
It is contended by respondent that the prorating provision of this statute is inoperative and void because, first, it is by its terms too ambiguous and-uncertain to be given any practical effect, and, second, because it contravenes the “due process” and “equal protection of the law” provisions of the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution, and, third, because it is in effect a state insolvency law and as such is superseded and its operation suspended by the federal bankruptcy act.
Respondent’s arguments on the first two propositions overlap and are so intermingled that they may properly be discussed together. It is urged that the provision is inoperative, for the reason that no procedure is provided by which it may be determined judicially whether, first, there is sufficient property to satisfy all of the judgments in full, or second, that the subsequent judgments have been procured within the sixty day period, or, third, are valid judgments. All of these contentions are without merit.
In support of the argument touching the constitutional question, it is insisted that an attachment lien gives a creditor a vested right in the property, reliance being placed upon Shinn on Attachment and Garnishment, 313, and Kelly v. Dill, 23 Minn. 435, and that, therefore, since the statute provides no notice or proceeding against the first attaching creditor, the prorating provision deprives the latter of his property without due process of law and deprives him of the equal protection of the law. If counsel’s first position were entirely correct, his latter contention might present a debatable point, but it should be remembered in this connection that the lien of an attaching creditor is wholly a creature of statute, and that an attachment proceeding such as we have under the code was unknown at common law (4 Cyc. 396), and that being entirely statutory it is within the province of the legislature to place any restrictions upon the extent of the right of an attaching creditor which it deems advisable. Such
Under attachment statutes containing a prorating provision, the attaching creditor does not get an unqualified vested lien, but the lien that he does take by virtue of his attachment is taken subject to the provision that under certain circumstances other creditors who proceed to judgment and come within the terms of the statute will be entitled to share in the proceeds of the attached property, pro rata. The prorating provision does not deprive the attaching creditor of a vested right and we, therefore, hold that the constitutional provision securing due process of law and the equal protection of the law is not involved.
Respondent’s position, founded upon his argument that the prorating provision of sec. 6781, supra, is in effect an insolvency law, and hence suspended by the federal bankruptcy act, 'is equally untenable. Our statute makes no provision for a discharge of the debtor from his obligations. A statute in order to be such an insolvency law as is suspended by the federal bankruptcy law must provide for the discharge of the debtor, and has been defined as: “A positive regulation made by the legislature to exonerate the person or property of a debtor and to relieve Mm from the pressure of creditors.” (22 Cyc. 1262; Cook v. Rogers, 31 Mich. 391; Haijek v. Luck, 96 Tex. 517, 74 S. W. 305; 4 Words and Phrases, 3655.)
The supreme court of Oregon in a recent case gave the following definition:
“A state statute, authorizing a general assignment, is an insolvent law when it permits a person of any class voluntarily to take advantage of its provisions by transferring his property in trust for the benefit of Ms creditors, and provides that, upon a due administration of his estate and a compliance with the requirements of the statute regulating the proceedings, he is thereby discharged from all liabilities on account of Ms debts which had been incurred at the time of making
Tested by the foregoing rules, the prorating provision of C. S., see. 6781, is not such an insolvency law as is suspended by the federal bankruptcy law.
Since it is necessary to reverse the judgment and the status of each of the judgments affected by it is properly before us, the question as to what judgments are entitled to prorate must be determined. This involves a further interpretation of the language of sec. 6781, supra.
Kimball v. Raymond, supra, is only authority for the proposition that the prorating provision does not apply to attachment proceedings in the justice court. There is nothing in the language of this section which necessarily excludes justice and probate judgment creditors from the right to prorate along with district court judgment creditors, and this without regard to whether such judgments have been docketed in the district court within the sixty-day period or at all. The statute does not say: ‘ ‘ Any creditor .... who within sixty days .... shall commence and prosecute to final judgment .... in the district court.” It merely says: “Any creditor . . . . who within sixty days .... shall commence and prosecute to final judgment ....,” and prescribes that in such event he is entitled to prorate with the -district court attaching creditor.
The manifest purpose of the act is to provide for a fair and equitable distribution of the available and attached assets of the debtor. This cannot be accomplished if those judgment creditors who have prosecuted their claims to final judgment in the justice or probate court are to be excluded for any reason.
The distinction between the two attachment proceedings seems to be merely this, that creditors are not entitled to prorate under an attachment proceeding in the 'justice court, but that when the property is attached on process out of the district court, all judgment creditors coming within the prescribed rule are entitled to prorate. Under the prorating statute it is unnecessary for any of the subsequent judgment
There is nothing in the language in Howard v. Grimes Pass Placer Mining Co., supra, from which a contrary view can necessarily be inferred. As this is a case of first impression, we are inclined to take the broadest possible view of the statute with the view of accomplishing the avowed purpose of the act. This view does no violence to the plain language of the act, and places all judgment.creditors as nearly on an equal footing as is possible under the provisions thereof. This seems to have been the legislative intent.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings in conformity with the views herein expressed. Costs awarded to appellants, except as against respondents A. G. Draper and the Citizens’ National Bank of Salmon.
Petition for rehearing denied.