84 Iowa 537 | Iowa | 1892
It is urged that the assignments of error are not sufficiently specific to justify their
II. Catherine Byrne is the defendant in this action, against whom the plaintiff company brought the action
John M. Mercer, as assignee, filed his petition of' intervention, claiming the goods by virtue of the assignment and his possession thereof at the time of' the seizure by virtue of the attachment. The plaintiff answered the intervention petition, putting in issue the averments as to the assignments; averring that prior to-November 30, 1889, Catherine Byrne was engaged in the retail boot and shoe business, and indebted to the-plaintiff and others, and that in making the assignment she acted with a fraudulent purpose to aid her relatives in presenting unjust claims against her estate, and to defraud her just creditors. Disregarding the question of fraud,, the evidence without dispute shows that John M. Mercer was before the commencement of this suit duly appointed, qualified and acting as the assignee of the estate of the defendant, and as such was in possession of the goods seized by virtue of the attachment. The intervenor asked the following-instruction, which the court refused, and the refusal is the basis of an assignment on this appeal: “Plaintiff in this case, the Hamilton-Brown Shoe Company, is making a collateral attack upon the assignment, and upon assignee’s title to said property. This cannot be done, and your verdict must be for the intervenor.”
The question thus presented meets with earnest
We think, however, that it is not alone the source from which the appointment comes that is to determine the custody of the property, — whether that of the law or the trustee, — but the extent of the law’s supervision and control of the property by virtue of the assignment. In this respect, under our law, the assignee has no independent authority. The limitation of our law upon the common-law assignments leaves little room for an assignor to invest his assignee with discretionary power, and particularly so as to procedure and distribution, which embrace the substantial purpose of such an assignment. As illustrating the rule announced by
It is, however, urged that the attachment proceeding has support in the decision of this court; but we think there is no case where the question has been 'presented and ruled favorably to the claims of the appellee upon
III. One Lyman Cook was also an intervenor, and asked against the defendant Byrne a judgment for rents which he claimed to be a preferred lien on the goods attached by virtue of a landlord’s lien. The court gave judgment against the defendant for the amount of three hundred and sixty-two dollars, and preferred the lien therefor to that of the attachment of the plaintiff. The plaintiff company alone appeals from the order. No question is made as to the correctness of the judgment against the defendant. The intervention by Cook presented the question of a priority of liens with the plaintiff company. The effect of our holding is to dismiss the plaintiff’s attachment, and hence it has no such interest as will permit it to question the correctness of the judgment in favor of inter-venor Cook.
The judgment, on the plaintiff’s appeal, is affirmed ; on the appeal of the intervenor, Mercer, it is REVERSED.