16 Iowa 234 | Iowa | 1864
I. The real parties in interest in this contest are the plaintiffs and Hughes, Adams & Co., whose execution against Kirkpatrick & Haworth, the defendant, Sebern, as sheriff, levied upon the goods in controversy. The plaintiffs certainly, and probably Hughes, Adams & Co., were non-residents, and acted through their agents and attorneys.
Traer & Co. acted for the plaintiffs, and on the 29th of March, 1862, they made, as agents for the plain tiffs (as will be more fully alluded to in another part of this opinion), the alleged contract with Kirkpatrick (the successor of Kirkpatrick & Haworth,) for the purchase of the goods in question.
The referee finds, as a fact, that the execution in favor of Hughes, Adams & Co., was “ in the defendant’s hands for service before the agreement between Traer and Kirkpatrick, in regard to the purchase of the goods, was made.” But the said writ was not levied until nearly a month after the said agreement, viz., not till April 24th, 1862.
. The referee further finds that the sale was free of fraud, and also, that “Traer and Kirkpatrick both had knowledge that the execution was in the sheriff’s hands for service at the time they entered into the agreement
At common law, the writ of fi. fa. bound the chattels of the defendant from its teste. 3 Bouv. Inst., 573, 574; Arch. Civ. PL, Tit. “Execution;” 1 Hay. (N. C.), 396; 2 Id., 57; 2 Hawkes, 232; 3 Id., 296.
As this had the unjust effect to overreach and defeat sales made even before the writ was delivered to the sheriff, it was remedied by the statute of 29 Charles II, which made the writ binding from the time of its delivery to the sheriff to be executed. We have very few if any decisions as to what the common law in tiiis country is, because the subject is, in most of the states, regulated by express statute. Thus, in New York, the statute of 29 Charles is re-enacted expressly. Ray v. Birdseye, 5 Denio, 624; see also 12 Johns., 403. So in Indiana, 7 Blackf, 501; 4 Id., 496; 4 Ind., 255. So in Illinois, 13 Ill., 20; 22 Id., 93. So in Kentucky, 1 Litt. St., 540; 4 Bibb., 31; 2 J. J. Marsh, 421. So in Florida, 4 Flor., 126; and Maryland, 3 Md., 99; and Alabama, 12 Ala., 71; Id., 247; 18 Id., 387. In Missouri; as between two officers, the first levy holds, though the writ was delivered last. Field v. Milburn, 9 Mo., 492. In California and Ohio, by statute, the lien is from levy only. In North Carolina, where the common law, as a body, is adopted, the lien is from the teste (8 Ire., 63, and cases supra), and Tennessee follows North Carolina (9 Humph., 91; 1 Swan, 304).
It does not accord with the policy of our laws, nor harmonize with decisions on kindred subjects. The whole current of judicial decisions,.in this State, has ever, and, we think, most wisely, been against secret constructive liens, especially when these are set up against purchasers. Barney v. McCarty, 15 Iowa; Same v. Little, Id., and Cummings v. Long, Id.; Jones v. Peasley, 3 Greene, 52; Gimble v. Ackley, 12 Iowa, 27. And we are not mistaken in saying that the professional sentiment in this State has always been, that executions were not liens on chattels until actual levy.
This was the opinion of the Court below, and in this respect there is no error.
II. It is next claimed by the appellants, that the transaction, under which the plaintiffs claim, did not amount to a sale of the goods.
The testimony before the referee was not before the District Court. The finding of the referee that there was a sale is therefore conclusive upon this point. He finds that Traer, as agent for the plaintiffs, agreed to take the goods in question and credit their judgment against Kirkpatrick & Haworth, with $300, or $350. He also finds, “that, upon the completion of such agreement, the said Traer and the said Kirkpatrick fastened up the store-room, locked the front door thereof, and Kirkpatrick passed the key over to Traer, as the agent of the plaintiffs.” “I also find that the goods were worth $600. That there was a further'agreement between them, that if the goods should sell for more than the amount that Traer agreed to credit on the plaintiffs’ judgment after paying the expenses of sale,” such excess was also to be credited.
To a bona fide arrangement of this kind we can see no objection, nor does such a stipulation for an additional contingent consideration, transmute, ex necessitate, a sale into a pledge or mortgage.
But suppose it did, the referee has found that the sheriff “had actual knowledge of the agreement between Traer and Kirpatrick, at the time he made the levy on the goods in1 controversy.” If there was a valid pledge of these goods to the plaintiffs, and the defendant had notice of this before he levied, the plaintiffs, under our statute, and decisions under it, would have the better right Notice is equivalent to recording, and this whether the transaction is a sale, pledge, or a mortgage. Rev., § 2201; McGavran v. Haupt, 9 Iowa, 82; Crawford v. Benton, 6 Id., 476; Miller v. Bryan, 3 Id., 58; Kuhn v. Graves, 9 Id., 303; Wilhelmi v. Leonard, 13 Id., 330.
The statutes of other states, including New York, are different, and hence the case of Ray v. Birdseye, 5 Denio, 619, cited by appellant’s counsel, is not applicable under our statute.
Without setting forth the findings of the referee, or the correspondence between the plaintiff and Traer & Co. in extenso, it is sufficient to state that, upon a careful examination, we are unanimously of the opinion that the agents had authority to make the contract, upon which the plaintiffs base their right to maintain the present action.
Affirmed.