191 F. 552 | 6th Cir. | 1911
The plaintiff brought this action of replevin in the court below to recover from the defendant, the sheriff of Cocke county, Tenn., one Climax engine or locomotive of the value . of $2.500, which the sheriff is alleged to have wrongfully attached as the property of the Catalouchee Company in a suit instituted in the chancery court of Cocke county styled Borehes & Co. v. Catalouchee Company and others. It is averred in the declaration that the defendant unlawfully retained possession of the engine until August 12, 1005. at which time it was turned over to the plaintiff under a writ issued in this cause. Previous to the issual of the writ the plaintiff executed a replevin bond in due form under date of August 10, 1905. On March 21, 1910, the defendants filed a petition in which it was averred that, while the plaintiff was using the engine over its railroad it was derailed, wrecked, and destroyed. Under the law of Tennessee applicable to such a situation, they prayed for judgment for the value of the engine. The parties having waived a jury, the court tried the case, and, without making a finding of facts, rendered judgment againt the plaintiff for $2,500, with interest for several years, the whole amount being $3,194.70, which, it was adjudgéd, should be paid to Boyer, the sheriff, and be held by him in lieu of the engine attached
The plaintiff has brought the case here, and one of the_ vital questions involved is whether the trial court erred in sustaining the objections of the defendant to the introduction as evidence of a duly certified copy of the,record of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of North Carolina, at Asheville, in the case of the North Carolina Land & Dumber Company against the Catalouchee Company, and which, for brevity, we shall refer to as the North Carolina case. As stated in the first assignment of error:
“This record was offered for the purpose of showing that the plaintiff at. the time the defendant levied an attachment upon the locomotive sued for had a prior valid lien upon said locomotive, which lien had been at the time of the commencement of this suit foreclosed in the said Circuit Court of the United States in the Western District of North Carolina, and title to said locomotive had been by the judgment and decree of said Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of North Carolina, declared to be in the plaintiff. And further to show that at the time the defendant levied his attachment the plaintiff had declared a forfeiture of all rights of the Catalouchee Company in and to the locomotive sued for.
“The plaintiff is seeking by this action to recover possession of the locomotive which was attached by the defendant as the property of the Catalouchee Company. The error of the court consisted in not receiving and considering this evidence upon the ground that the defendant was not a party to the suit in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of North Carolina and was not bound thereby, whereas, the court should have admitted said evidence and should have considered the same because the defendant levied upon said locomotive as the property of the Catalouchee Company and is claiming it as the property of said Catalouchee Company, and is therefore bound by any judgment or decree against said company in respect to the title to said.property.”
The suit thus referred to was instituted on October 10, 1903, and upon the ground that the conditions therein stipulated had been broken sought the foreclosure of a mortgage made by the Catalouchee Company to the North Carolina Land & Lumber Company upon a great amount and variety of property in North Carolina, including the Climax engine or locomotive now in question. Soon after the institution of the North Carolina suit, the court appointed receivers therein who took possession of all the mortgaged property then in North Carolina. The engine, however, had been used by the Catalouchee Coim pany in hauling its freight over the railroad of another company which extended partly into Tennessee. On October 3, 1903, the Tennessee & North Carolina Railroad Company, S. H. Stansberry & Sons, and other creditors of the Catalouchee Company had separately sued the latter company in the state court of Cocke county, Tenn., and, having obtained attachments had caused them to be levied upon the engine in question while it was upon a journey into that state. But on October 12, 1903, the receivers under the orders of the court in the North Carolina case had made some satisfactory arrangement with those creditors, all their attachments were released, and possession of the engine was given to the receivers. However, before they got it back to North Carolina, it was on October 15, 1903, seized and levied upon
At the outset, it may be remarked that, while the receivers thus got possession of the engine in Tennessee for the purposes of the North Carolina case, we lay little stress upon their possession of it at the time of the levy of the attachment in the Sorches Case because in the view we take of the case the result must be the same, whether or not any effect be given to such possession by them.
Under the law of North Carolina the right of strict foreclosure exists. This right was sought to be enforced in the North Carolina case begun on October 10, 1903, and by the decree in that case rendered July 12, 1904, the complainant therein was afforded that relief, and was adjudged to be the owner of the engine. Did the decree in that case relate back either to the breach of the condition of the mortgage or to the commencement of the action and did the plaintiffs in the Sorches Case, who acquired their attachment lien after both of those events and during the pendency of the North Carolina case, take their rights under that lien, subject to having it defeated by the judgment in the previously pending suit for foreclosing the mortgage? Jn the North Carolina case the engine appears to have been impleaded as a part of the mortgaged property, although at the time the suit was brought it was actually in Tennessee, having been taken there in the way indicated. Can the latter fact have any influence upon the plaintiff’s right?
The view's of the case held by the learned trial judge can best be stated in his own language. In his opinion it is said:
“The engine was attached by the defendants as the property of the Oatalouehee Company in their suit in the chancery court of Cocke county on October 15. 1903. Obviously, therefore, there was no wrongful seizure or detention of the engine by the defendants so far as the North Carolina Land & Lumber Company is concerned, unless it held the legal title to the engine at the time of the attachment. And the decree rendered by the United .States Circuit Court at Asheville in the case of North Carolina Land & Lumber Company v. Oatalouehee Company, on March 12. 190U--if the same is to be properlv construed as vesting title in the plaintiff to the engine in question on that date, as to which 1 express no opinion — would be manifestly unavailing in so far as the rights of the plaintiff in the present suit is concerned, since, if the engine was the properly of the Oatalouehee Company at the time it was attached, a subsequent decree transferring the title of the Oatalouehee Company thereto to the plaintiff, in a suit in which the present defendants were not parties, would clearly only transfer such rights as the Oatalouehee Company had. and he subject to whatever prior rights in the engine the defendants had acquired by reason of their prior attachment in the chancery court. In order, therefore, for the plaintiff to succeed, it must show that it. had become the owner of the engine on the day of the attachment, October 15, 1903, or otherwise held the legal title thereto on that date. This. I think, it has entirely failed to show. The subsequent decree of the chancery court at Asheville obviously does not show this, as it could not in any aspect purport to be a divestnre of title prior to the date of the decree, nor does it recite that the engine had become the property of the Land & Lumber Company on or before October 15, 1903. the decree, which was dated March' 12, 1904. merely reciting that the Oatalouehee Company should ‘from henceforth stand absolutely debarred and foreclosed of and from all right, title,’ and interest in the property described in the decree, and, even if it did so recite, its recitals would, it seems, not be. competent as evidence against the present defendants, who were not parties to that cause.”
“By a mortgage of personal property, differing in this respect from a pledge, it is not merely the possession or a special property that passes; but, both at law and in equity, the whole title is transferred to the mortgagee, as security for the debt, subject only to be defeated by performance of the condition, or by redeinption on bill in equity within a reasonable time; and the right of possession, when there is no express stipulation to the contrary, goes with the right of property.”
And that this is the general rule is stated in Jones on Chattel Mortgages, § 703. It follows that the decree in the North Carolina case was a judicial declaration of a pre-existing right.
“That certain steamers engaged in interstate commerce were not subject to taxation in a state where they might be temporarily when prosecuting their business, but were taxable at their home port, which was their situs, and where they belonged, the court saying: ‘We are satisfied that the state of California had no jurisdiction over these vessels for the purpose of taxation. They were not, properly, abiding within its limits, so as to become incorporated with the other personal property of the state. They were there but temporarily engaged in lawful trade and commerce, with their situs_ at the home port, where the vessels belonged, and where the owners were liable to he taxed for the capital invested, and where the taxes had been paid.’ ”
The situs of this piece of property being in North Carolina, the court there had jurisdiction over it as being embraced in the mortgage. This jurisdiction was not destroyed when the engine, being temporarily out of that state for purposes of interstate commerce, was wrongfully seized as tlie property of another to whom it did not belong.
“Ordinarily it Is true that the decree of a court binds only the partiés and their privies in representation or estate. But he who purchases during the pendency of a suit is held bound by the decree that may be made against the person from whom he derives title. The litigating parties are exempted from taking any notice of the title so acquired, and such purchaser need not be made a party to the suit. Where there is a real and fair purchase without any notice, the rule may operate very hardly. But it is a rule founded upon a great public policy; for otherwise alienations made during a suit might defeat its whole purpose, and there would be no end to litigation. And hence arises the maxim, ‘pendente lite, nihil innovetur,’ the effect of which is, not to annul the conveyance, but only to render it subservient to the rights of the parties in the litigation. As to the rights of these parties, the conveyance is treated as if it never had any existence, and it does not vary them.”
The same views are clearly expressed in Bennet on Lis Pendens pp. 86-90. The authorities also seem to agree, for obvious reasons, that in applying'the lis pendens doctrine an attaching creditor cannot stand on a better footing than that of an innocent purchaser for value. In the case of Fletcher v. Ferrel, 9 Dana, 372, 35 Am. Dec. 143, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky dealt with questions very closely related to those involved in this case, and, speaking through Judge Ewing, among other things, said:
' “Whatever may be the doctrine applicable to purchases made in, and by citizens of, a distinct and independent nation, from that in which the suit is depending, we cannot doubt that within these United States purchases in one state pending a suit in another must be treated as pendente lite purchases, and subject to the rule applicable to such purchases.”
We have been able to find no case in which the Supreme Court ruled upon the applicability of the lis pendens doctrine to personal property (other than negotiable paper and articles of ordinary commerce, as to which all the authorities seem to agree), but the subject of litigation in the Kentucky case was another kind of personal property, viz., slaves. Nevertheless the lis pendens doctrine was applied.
In Carr v. Lewis Coal Co., 15 Mo. App. 551, in the course of an elaborate and interesting op.inion, the St. Eouis Court of Appeals said:
“In Murray v. Lylburn, 2 Johns. Ch. [N. Y.] 441, Chancellor Kent doubts whether the doctrine ought to be carried so far as to affect sales of movable property, such as horses, cattle, and grain, and Judge Bradley in County of Warren v. Marcy [97 U. S. 106, 24 L. Ed. 977] supra, says that the doctrine is applicable to personalty, with the two exceptions of negotiable paper, and articles of ordinary commerce sold in the usual way. In New Hampshire,*559 however, the courts refuse to apply the doctrine to personalty (Chase v. Searles, 45 N. H. 511); whilst in Mississippi, on the other hand, it is said that the doctrine at this day applies with equal force to contracts in regard to personalty and those concerning real estate. McCutchen v. Miller, 31 Miss. 65. In Pennsylvania the doctrine is applied to nonnegotiable securities. Diamond v. Lawrence Co., 37 Pa. 353, 78 Am. Dec. 429.
“So far as the reasons on which the rule itself Is based go, they seem to apply with equal force to personal property and real estate. The doctrine is an equitable one; 'but in law the same effect is produced by the rule that the purchaser takes only the title of his vendor. Every man is supposed to be attentive to what passes in the superior courts of the sovereignty where he resides, and some courts have based the doctrine upon the theory of notice. But it would seem that the doctrine really rests upon the public policy which does not allow litigating parties to give to others, pending the litigation, rights to the property in dispute, so as to prejudice the opposite party. * * *
•‘We think that both reason and authority are for the conclusion that the doctrine of lis pendens is to be applied to personal properly of the character in question in the present case, which is not an article of ordinary commerce, as are cattle and grain.”
And it would seem reasonable that this doctrine should be applied in a case where, as here, the property is a distinct article not kept for sale as merchandise. In such case the reasons sometimes urged against the inclusion of personal property under the doctrine of lis pendens do not exist, and we have reached the conclusion that the devolution of the legal title upon the breach of the condition of the mortgage and the pendency of the North Carolina suit at the time the Borches suit was begun, alike extinguished and annulled the attachment lien acquired in the latter, eo instanti the judgment in the North Carolina case was rendered.
It results that it was erroneous to exclude the record in the North Carolina case as evidence in support of the title of the plaintiff. We think it was clearly admissible for that purpose. To hold otherwise and affirm the judgment of the court below obviously would destroy the plaintiff’s rights under the mortgage and make paramount those acquired long subsequently by the levy of the attachment, all because the mortgaged engine in doing the work for which it was designed, and in the regular course of that work from day to day passed out of one of the states of the Union into another which adjoined it. We think the rights of a mortgagee of such property should not be ■so easily taken from him.
It is, however, contended by the defendant that it is not shown by the record in the North Carolina case that the engine was actually embraced in the mortgage enforced in that case either as property existing when the mortgage was made or as property acquired thereafter and coming within the terms of that instrument. It is true that the averments of the bill are expressed in somewhat general terms. The engine in question is not particularly described by name either in the bill or in the mortgage agreement. The latter describes the personal property in this language, namely:
“Fourth. The party of the second part agrees that, in the event of their failure to comply with the provisions of this contract, then all the property, both real and personal, belonging to the said party of the second part and ■situate upon the said land or used in the development of the same, shall become and be the property of the party of the first part, and the party of the*560 second part shall-not remove any of said plant or equipment, except through ' and by the consent of the party of the first part, and party of the second part agrees that all equipment and improvements that they put on the property shall be free and clear of all incumbrances.”
By the decree in the North Carolina case it is “ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant, the Catalouchee Company, do from henceforth stand absolutely debarred and foreclosed of and from all rights, title, interest, estate, and equity of redemption of and in the following described land and premises, to wit,” and, after specifically describing the lands, it proceeds:
“Together with all and singular the mills, machinery, railroad track, rolling stock, and equipment used in connection with 'said railroad, and all other improvements and fixtures attached to or located-or standing upon said tracts of land or either of them; and all the rights of way which have been acquired by the said defendant, the Catalouchee Company, over and upon the land of any person or persons whatsoever, together 'with the railroad track and the privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in any wise appertaining, which has been constructed by the said defendant, and running from the mouth of Big Creek up to and upon the lands heretofore described, said railroad track being in its entire length about 4% miles.
“And if is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said North Carolina Land & Lumber Company is the owner in fee simple and entitled to immediate possession of all of said tracts of land and the machinery and improvements above described, • free from and divested of any claims or liens of the defendant, the Catalouchee Company, for or on account of or by reason of its contract of purchase from the said North Carolina Land & Lumber Company or otherwise or for any amount which the Catalouchee Company ,may have paid under the terms and provisions of said contract.”
After a most careful consideration we are of opinion that the entire record in the North Carolina case, as distinguished from the judgment alone, sufficiently shows that the engine was embraced in the mortgage, and that the title thereto passed to the plaintiff as we have indicated. The record was therefore competent as evidence in behalf of the plaintiff in the deraignment -of its title.
' We need not notice the other errors assigned because they may not arise at another trial.
But for the'error indicated the judgment must be reversed, with costs, and, upon the return of the case, a new trial must be awarded, and further proceedings taken in accordance with law and the principles announced in this opinion.