24 Ind. App. 572 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
Suit by appellee in replevin. As it is admitted by appellant’s counsel that the facts alleged in the second paragraph of answer were admitted in evidence and are contained substantially in the special finding, it is not necessary to notice further the ruling of the court sustaining the demurrer to that paragraph. .The facts found show that on April 6, 1898, appellee was the owner and in possession of the property in controversy. That at the time appellant levied on the property appellee was in possession, and was the owner, and so informed appellant before the levy. That appellee instituted this suit April 30, 1898. That the property was taken from him by appellant April 7, 1898, and unlawfully detained. That ever since April 30, 1898, appellee has been, and still is, in rightful possession. That April 7, 1898, D. P. Erwin & Company sued one Al
Provision is made for requiring a claimant to come in and litigate his claim by §§1613, 1614 Burns 1894, as follows: “When any officer has seized any personal property by virtue of any execution or writ of attachment, and doubts whether some person, other than the execution or attachment defendant, is not the owner of or has some claim to such property, he may give notice, in writing, to all
“Any person notified as in the last preceding section, who shall not, within twenty days after receipt of such notice, if he be within the State, or forty days if he be without the State,when he receives the same, institute proceedings under this act, to try the right of such property, and prosecute the same to final judgment, with reasonable diligence, shall forever bar any action against such officer or the purchaser of such property on account of the same: Provided, however, that if, previous to the receipt of such notice, such claimant may have instituted any other suit to assert his right to such property, he may prosecute the same to final judgment.”
Section 937 Burns 1894, §925 Horner 1897, provides: “Whenever any person other than the defendant shall claim any property attached, the right of property may be tried as in cases of property taken on execution, and the claimant, having notice of the attachment, shall be bound to prosecute his claim as in such cases, or be barred of his right.”
It is true, as argued by counsel, that §§937 and 1597 must be construed together. But it is also true that §937 must be construed in connection with §§1597-1614, inclusive. Section 937 contemplates a notice of some kind. It does not appear by whom or when it should be issued or served. The section can be made effective only by construing it in connection with §§1597-1614, which were previously enacted. These sections made provision for trying the right of property seized on execution or by attachment and claimed by some person other than the execution or attachment defendant. They provide by whom and when notice shall be given, and what proceedings shall be had after such notice. There is nothing in §937, standing alone, that authorizes any one to issue any notice.
In Firestone v. Mishler, 18 Ind. 439, the appellant had caused an attachment to issue against the property of a person other than appellee, and a levy made.' The officer making the levy notified appellee of such facts. Two paragraphs of answer pleading these facts were demurred to. The court said: “By the demurrer, the question is presented, whether, after the motion (notice?) given, the appellee was confined to the proceeding to try the right of property, provided in Chap. 5, 2 R. S. p. 493-7. See, also, §169, p. 67. Or whether he was also entitled to resort to the ordinary proceeding in the nature of replevin. We are of opinion that the remedy given in chapter five was intended to protect the officer, who acted in good faith, and purchasers at sales under such proceedings; but that so far as the plaintiff in the writ is concerned, it is merely cumulative.”
The chapter five referred to in the above case is §§1597-1614, inclusive, Burns 1894, §§1529-1546 Horner 1897; and §169 referred to is §937 Burns 1894, §925 Horner 1897. The opinion in that case does not say whether the proceedings were in a justice’s court or not, but the reasoning of the opinion leads to the conclusion they were. The court had previously held (Matlock v. Strange, 8 Ind. 57), that the statute applied only in proceedings before a justice of the peace.
In the case at bar the officer making the levy is sole defendant. As we construe these statutory provisions, he alone can compel the claimant to come in and litigate his claim. As against the parties to the suit in which the execution or attachment is issued, he may come in or he may bring an independent action. It is evident that the object contemplated in requiring the claimant to litigate his claim is to protect an officer seizing property under the writ, and purchasers at sales under such proceedings; and if the officer gives the claimant notice, as provided, before the claimant has instituted another suit to assert his right to the property, such claimant must proceed as the statute directs. Wright v. Shelt, 19 Ind. App. 1.
The finding does not show that any notice contemplated by these sections of the statute was given. Nothing is said in the statute about any notice by the justice trying the cause. It is true the finding shows that appellee had actual notice of