18 Me. 231 | Me. | 1841
The opinion of the Court was by
Both parties claim the property under William R. Rogers; the defendants as purchasers by a bill of sale executed on the 14th of January, 1837, and the plaintiff by'an. attachment made by him as a deputy sheriff on several writs on' the 16th of the same month. It appears from the testimony, that the property was on the land or within buildings belonging to the defendants, and that after the bill of sale Rogers no longer had possession, or control of the lands or buildings, but that they were within the exclusive control of the defendants or their'agent. The sale was therefore complete before the attachment, and the formal delivery or marking on subsequent days was unnecessary. Carrington v. Smith, 8 Pick. 419. Their title would be good if the sale was bona fide and for a valuable consideration. This was denied and the plaintiff called Rogers as a witness, and he being objected to was permitted to testify, that the design in making the bill of sale was to prevent an attachment of the property by his creditors. Rogers, having on the 24th of March preceding entered into a contract to build a dam and mills for the defendants, had proceeded to accomplish the undertaking, and had received advances earlier and beyond the amount due, and made the bill of sale of the materials provided, as the defendants allege, to secure them for such advances. The position of the witness was like that of a vendor of personal property, who having received his payfor.it, testifies to a fraud between himself and the vendee, and thereby enables his own creditors to apply the property to the payment of his debts, thus securing to himself the benefit of it twice. It is said, that his. interest is still balanced because he thereby incurs a new liability to the vendee, who may recover of him on the contract of sale the value of the property. In the case of Bailey v. Foster, 9
To constitute an attachment, it is not necessary, that the officer should handle the goods attached, but he must be in view of them with the power of controlling them and of taking them into his possession. And in case of an attempt by another to interpose or take possession, he should take such measures as to prevent it, unless resisted.
The return of an officer where he is a party is prima facie evidence, and only so, of an attachment. Bruce v. Holden, 21 Pick. 187; Sias v. Badger, 6 N. H. R. 393.
To preserve an attachment when made, the officer must by himself or his agent retain his control and power of taking immediate possession in all those cases in which the property is capable of being taken into actual possession, unless our statute establishes, as it does in certain cases, a different rule. If he does not do this, the attachment will be regarded as abandoned and dissolved. Sanderson v. Edwards, 16 Pick. 144.
The application of these principles to- the present case, as now presented by the testimony, would decide that the attachment might he ..sufficient, if followed by the continual presence of the officer or .of some .one on his behalf. There is no evidence of any contin
The principle that fraud is not to be presumed and that the bur-then of proof to establish it is upon the party alleging it, was recognized by the Court in the ease of Blaisdell v. Cowell, 14 Maine R. 370.
It is not perceived, that the Court can properly come to any more definite conclusion upon the rights of the parties without the assistance of a jury, to which the matters of fact must again be submitted.
Verdict set aside and a new trial granted.