58 Ark. 446 | Ark. | 1894
The Schwab Clothing Company brought an action in the Carroll circuit court against K. B. Thornton to recover the amount of a debt due to that company from Thornton, and obtained an attachment against his property, on the alleged ground that he had sold and conveyed it with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder, or delay his creditors. The attachment was levied upon a stock of merchandise found in the possession of B. J. Rosewater and H. T. Pendergrass, who had purchased the same from Thornton before the attachment issued. Rosewater and Pendergrass having filed an interplea claiming the attached property, and no answer thereto having been filed, they moved the court to require the plaintiff to file such answer. The motion was denied; but, the plaintiff company having stated to the court that it admitted that the goods were purchased by the interpleaders for a valuable consideration, and were delivered to them before the issuance of the attachment, and that they would undertake to defeat the 'sale solely on the ground that it was made by Thornton to defraud his creditors, and that the inter-pleaders purchased with knowledge of such intent, the court treated this statement as forming an issue as to the validity of the sale, and ruled that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff, and that it was entitled to open and conclude the case. The issue thus formed was submitted for trial to a jury, and their verdict was for the plaintiff.
The abstract of the appellant contains neither the instructions given and refused nor the motion for a new trial. The appellees’ brief, however, has copied the instructions, and stated three assignments of error, taken, as we suppose, from the motion. We have considered these assignments, but have not gone beyond them to consider points made upon matters not found in the record as abstracted by either of the parties. Ruble v. Helm, 57 Ark. 304 ; 21 S. W. Rep. 470.
The code provides that ‘ ‘ any person may, before the sale of any attached property, or before the payment to the plaintiff of the proceeds thereof, * * * * present his complaint, verified by oath, to the court, * * * * stating a claim to the property, or an interest in it, * * * and setting forth the facts upon which such claim is founded, and his claim shall be investigated.” Where the claimant is a non-resident, he is required to give the security for costs required of all nonresident plaintiffs before bringing their actions; and it is further provided that ‘‘the court may hear the proof, * * or may impanel a jury to inquire into the facts.” Mansf. Dig. secs. 356, 358.
If the facts stated in the claimants’ complaint are not sufficient to constitute a title to, or an interest in, the property, it is certainly not made the duty of the court, to proceed with the investigation ; and it is equally plain that the plaintiff in the attachment cannot be denied the privilege of questioning the sufficiency of the complaint by demurrer, before being subjected to the delay and expense of an inquiry as to the existence of the facts it alleges. Nor can we think that the statute intends that the claimants, after making oath to their complaint, shall prove the facts on which they rely, although they are undisputed. If they are to be denied, or matter in avoidance is to be set up, we are unable to see why it is not as important in this as it is in other proceedings that the ground on which the attaching creditor resists the claim should be stated in writing. Thus to have it stated, and by a pleading offering a material and certain issue, would not only facilitate, an investigation by the court, but seems to be as essential as it would be in ordinary cases to a proper trial of the claim by a jury. Such appears to have been the view entertained by this court in Neal v. Newland, 4 Ark. 459, and Hershy v. Clarksville Institute, 15 Ark. 130. These cases arose under a statute- not substantially different from the code provision to which we have referred. In the former case it was held that the interplea of one claiming attached property must be in writing, and embody matter sufficient to support a judgment. In the case last above cited it was held that the claimant could prosecute his claim as an independent proceeding ; and it was said by Chief Justice Watkins that the interplea “proceeds upon the ground of a wrongful injury ” to the claimant’s “right of possession,” and that it was allowed as a “ summary,” but • not, when prosecuted in the circuit court, “informal, substitute” for replevin.
Under a statute very similar to that in force here at the time of the decisions just cited, the Supreme Court of Illinois held that where an interplea claiming attached property remains unanswered, it will be taken to be true; thus placing the interplea, as do other authorities, upon the same footing as any other pleading in the nature of a complaint or petition. Williams v. Vanmetre, 19 Ill. 293 ; Boone’s Code Pleading, sec. 159a; Waples, Attachment, sec. 7, p. 481. And why should it not be so regarded, since there seems to be no reason for dispensing with an answer to the interplea that is not equally applicable to an action of replevin ?
In Berlin v. Cantrell, 33 Ark. 611, the opinion of the court treats an interplea filed under sec. 5583 of Mansf. Digest, as a proceeding similar to the interplea filed under the attachment law in force before the adoption of the code. Speaking of the interplea in that case, Chief Justice English said it was in the nature of a cross-action for the property claimed by Mrs. Cantrell, and “ was her suit, in which, in legal effect, she was the plaintiff.” In two later cases a similar view is taken of the remedy afforded in attachment proceedings by the code provision quoted above. Sannoner v. Jacobson, 47 Ark. 31 ; Rice v. Dorrian, 57 Ark. 545. Commenting on that provision in Sannoner v. Jacobson, Chief Justice Cockrill says that the “intervening suit is a separate and distinct one.” As such is its nature, we think the pleadings in it must be governed by the rules applicable to similar pleadings in other actions. Boone, Code Pleading, sec. 159.
Our conclusion, therefore, on this point is that the court erred in refusing to require a written answer to the interplea of the appellants. But in the present case the error was obviously a harmless one. The oral answer which the appellee was permitted to make appears to have been concisely stated, and the single issue it tendered was such as the jury could not have failed to understand when submitted to them by the court’s charge. And, as the answer undertook to avoid the sale of the goods solely on the ground that it was fraudulent, the appellee assumed the burden of proof, and was properly allowed to open and conclude the argument.
Affirmed.
See Mansf. Dig. sec. 2859; Andrews v. Simms, 33 Ark. 771.
The instructions given to the jury over appellants’ objections were based upon the theory that a purchaser would be bound by constructive notice of his vendor’s fraudulent intent, appellants insisting that the purchaser must have actual notice. One of the instructions given by the court and objected to by appellants was as follows:
“ If you find from the evidence, and by a preponderance thereof, that the defendant, Thornton, at the time of making the sale to the interpleader, Rosewater, made the same with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder or delay his creditors, and you further find, by a preponderance of the evidence, that said Rosewater, at the time of purchasing, had knowledge of such fraudulent intent, or had notice of such facts and circumstances as would put him as a prudent man upon inquiry, and which would lead to a knowledge of such fraudulent intent of Thornton, and purchased with such knowledge or notice, then such sale wottld be void as to creditors of said defendant, Thornton.”