125 Iowa 255 | Iowa | 1904
The important question in this case is whether, the plaintiff is- estopped from maintaining this action for the value of the stock of goods. It is contended by the appellant that when he intervened in the attachment suit he elected to pursue one of two or more inconsistent remedies, and that he is now bound by such election, and can recover nothing herein. The question is an important one, and involves a construction, of section 3928 of the Code, which is as follows:
Any person other than the defendant may, before the sale of any attached property, or before the payment to the plaintiff of the proceeds thereof, or any attached debt, present his petition verified by oath to the court, disputing, the validity of the attachment, or stating a claim to the property or money, or to an interest in or lien on it, under any other
The language of the statute is that the intervener’s claim to the attached property shall be summarily investigated and determined, and that an order shall be made fully protecting his rights. Its clearly expressed purpose is to provide a speedy and summary method whereby the title to the attached property may be determined, and it is as clearly apparent that when it is found that the property belongs to. the intervener the court may order it delivered to him released from the attachment. Furthermore, we have held that no question other than the intervener’s claim or title can be tried and determined under this statute. Valley Bank v. Wolf, 101 Iowa, 51. If the specific property in question had been held by the sheriff at the time of the judgment in the intervention proceedings, there can be no doubt that the court could have ordered and enforced its return to the plaintiff, who was found to be the true owner thereof. But the property had been found to be perishable, and had been sold as provided by law (chapter 101, page 56, Acts Twenty-Seventh General Assembly) ; and the proceeds thereof were held by the sheriff awaiting the final judgment of the court. It was, therefore, a fund in court, standing in the place of the specific property which it represented, to be disposed of only upon the judgment or order of the court. The plaintiff was advised of the exact situation before he intervened, and was bound to know that the property itself could not then be returned to him; hence we think it must be said that he sought to establish his claim to the money in the hands of the sheriff, which stood for the property, otherwise the trial of
That the two remedies pursued by the plaintiff are inconsistent we think admits of no doubt. In the one he claims the ownership of the property, and asks that it be returned to him, and in the other he treats it as having been converted, and asks to recover its value. He surely could not maintain both actions at once, nor in succession. True, he might commence both at once, but in such event he could be required to elect which remedy he would follow, and dismiss the other. But he made his own election, and followed it to a final judgment, and by that he is bound whether the result is satisfactory or not. In Talley Bank v. Wolf, supra, there was an intervention under the same statute, and upon a trial the issue was determined adversely to the intervener, who had obtained possession of the property under a delivery bond, and we held, that recovery on the bond could not be had in the intervention proceedings, but would have to be obtained through an independent action. . There was no question of the election of remedies in the case, and nothing was said therein on the subject-
For the reasons given herein, the judgment is reversed.