211 N.W. 599 | S.D. | 1926
December 7, 1923, plaintiff commenced an action in Spink county, S. D., against the defendants above named, and at the time of issuance of summons procured from the clerk of courts of -Spink -county in the manner provided by law a warrant of attachment, -which warrant of attachment was delivered to the sheriff of Miner county, S. D'., who on December 8, 1923, purported to execute said warrant by levying the same in the manner provided by subdivision 1, section 2442, R. C. 1919, upon certain real estate of defendants in said Miner county.
Thereafter the intervenor prosecuted to conclusion a certain
Thereafter and on March 19, 1925, intervenor, upon order to show cause, moved the circuit court of Spink county, S'. D., to vacate and dissolve the attachment sought to be levied in the state court action instituted by plaintiff against the defendants, which motion was by the learned circuit judge denied and from that order intervenor appeals. No brief has been filed by respondent.
Upon the record as presented to us we are met 'by two preliminary questions: First, as to the right of the appellant to move for dissolution of the attachment; and, second, whether such motion was made in the proper court.
Appellant herein is a judgment creditor of the defendants holding a judgment lien upon the Miner county real estate junior to the attachment lien of respondent, if said attachment lien is valid. Under the provisions of section 2448, R. C. 1919, and the decision of this court in Citizens’ Bank v. Corkings, 9 S. D. 614, 70 N. W. 1059, 62 Am. St. Rep. 891 (reversed on rehearing upon other grounds, 10 S. D. 98, 72 N. W. 99), we are of the opinion that appellant was entitled to apply for dissolution of the attachment upon any jurisdictional grounds.
It appears that after the institution of the action by respondent against defendants in Spink county it was stipulated between the parties to said action by their attorneys that the venue thereof should be changed to Miner county, where defendants resided. The date of said stipulation and whether or not the same was in writing is not apparent from the record before us'. In any event such stipulation was not filed in either Spink county or Miner county, nor was any order entered transferring the cause, nor were the papers filed in Spink county transferred to Miner county. At the time appellant instituted this proceeding for dissolution of attachment there was on file with the clerk of courts of Spink county in the action instituted by respondent against defendants the summons, complaint, affidavit for attachment, and undertaking for attachment, and there was on file with
Appellant relies upon two grounds for the dissolution of the attachment: First, that the sheriff failed to make the levy in the manner specified by subdivision 1, § 2442, R. C. 1919, in that the notice of attachment subscribed by him did not in the body thereof state the names of the parties to the action, andi, further,' that he caused said notice to be recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Miner county -in the ’book of miscellaneous records and not in the same book as notices of the pendency of actions. Appellant’s second contention is that, assuming a valid levy, the lien of the attachment fell because the sheriff failed within 20 days after the levy to file with the clerk of courts who issued the warrant an inventory of the property levied upon, together with the warrant of attachment and the sheriff’s return thereon, as contemplated by section 2437, Code 1919.
For the purposes of this opinion we will assume, without deciding, that the acts of the sheriff shown by the record herein constituted a sufficient levy upon the real estate in question, pursuant to the provisions of subdivision 1, § 2442, R. C. 1919, and effectually created a lien thereon, leaving for our consideration the sole question of whether or not the lien acquired by such levy was thereafter lost and divested by the sheriff’s failure to file inventory and return within 20 days, under the provisions of section 2437. It is undisputed upon the record before us that no
Relevant statutes all of which were re-enacted at the same time as part of the Revised Code of 1919, are sections 2450 and 2437 of said Code and the last clause of section 2442 thereof. Section 2442, after specifying in considerable detail the method of levying a warrant of attachment upon various sorts of property, proceeds as follows:
“ * * * uen 0f tiie attachment shall be effectual from the time when a levy is made in accordance with the foregoing provisions.”
Section 2450 and 2437 read respectively as follows :
Section 2450: "Return by Officer. — When the warrant shall be fully executed or dissolved, the sheriff must return the same, with the proceedings thereon, to the court in which the action was brought.”
Section 2437: “Inventory of Property to Be Made. — Immediately upon making such seizure he shall make a just and true inventory of all the property so seized, and of the books, vouchers and papers taken into his custody, stating therein the estimated value of the several articles and kinds of personal property, enumerating such of them as are perishable, and giving a description of the real property so attached, 'which inventory must be signed by the sheriff, attached to and made a part of the return on the warrant of attachment. And any subsequent execution of the warrant of attachment upon other property of the debtor must be made and an inventory thereof made and returned, in like manner. And such officer shall, within twenty days after making such seizure, file all of said papers, including said inventory and return, with the clerk of the court who issued the warrant.”
The groundwork of our present law of attachment is found in sections 180' to 196, inclusive, of the Code of Civil Procedure,
Section 185 of the Code of 1867-68 was the only mention of inventory, and was as follows:
"Mode of Proceeding in Executing Warrant. — -The sheriff to whom such warrant of attachment is directed andi delivered, shall proceed thereon in all respects in the manner required of him by law in case of attachments against absent debtors; shall make and return an inventory, and shall keep the property seized -by him, or the proceeds of such as shall have been sold, to answer any judgment which may be obtained in such action; and shall, subject to the -direction of the court or judge, collect and receive into his possession all debts, credits, and effects of the defendant. The sheriff may also take such legal proceedings, either in his own-name or in the name of such defendant, as may be necessary for that purpose, and discontinue the same at such times and on such terms as the court or judge may direct.”
The Territorial Code Commission, who prepared the Code of 1877, while retaining the general structure of the attachment law as based on the New York procedure, modified it considerably in some particulars, influenced apparently by the then recent California Code of Civil Procedure of 1872; section 185 of our Code of 1867-68 above quoted was by the Code commissioners expanded and amplified into three sections, being sections 202, 203, and 204, Code of Civil Procedure 1877. Of these section 203 was practically identical with our present section 2437, R. C. 1919, above quoted, excepting only that the last sentence of the present section -was absent. This last sentence Was introduced into our law by chapter 2-4, Laws of 1887, reading as follows;
Section 1: “When Papers Shall Be Piled by Sheriff. — That section two hundred andi three of chapter eleven of the Code of Civil Procedure be and the same is hereby amended -by adding thereto the following- words: And such officer shall within twenty
Section 2: “All acts and parts of acts in conflict with the provisions of this act are hereby repealed.”
Subsequent to the amendment of 1887 and before the enactment of the 1919 'Code this court held that the 1887 amendment in effect established a return day for the process and was mandatory upon the officer, at least to such an extent that a sheriff] who had made a levy under a warrant of attachment and failed to file his inventory and return within 20 -days could not justify his taking as against the owner of the property seeking to recover the same by claim and delivery. Carson v. Fuller, 11 S. D. 502, 78 N. W. 960, 74 Am. St. Rep. 823 (cited and approved on this point in Guernsey v. Tuthill, 12 S. D. 584, 82 N. W. 190).
Section 2442, R. C. 1919, was brought into our law by the commissioners who prepared the Revised Code of 1919, being taken from North Dakota (section 7547, N. D. Comp. Daws 1913)-
In view of the history of these various' provisions of our statute and the re-enactment of all thereof in the Code of 19x9 subsequent to the decision in Carson v. Fuller, supra, we are of the opinion that the 20-day period for filing- the inventory and return prescribed by section 2437 is mandatory and is a restriction upon the unlimited general provision for filing the return set out in section 2450, R. C. 1919, and that while the lien of the attachment is effectual from the time a proper levy is made, as provided by section 2442, R. C. 1919, yet such lien is subject automatically to- be lost and divested ab initio-, if within 20 days after the seizure the sheriff fails to file his inventory and warrant together with his return thereon, as prescribed -by section 2437.
We are therefore of the opinion that the motion to dissolve the attachment in the instant case should have been granted, and, the order appealed from is reversed and the ,cause remanded, with directions to enter an order in conformity herewith.