13 Colo. 329 | Colo. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 6th of October, 1885, Thomas M. Richards and Gabriel F. Rule executed and delivered a statement in writing, duly verified, authorizing the entry of judgment against them in the district court of Fremont county, for the sum of $891,60, in favor of the Struby-Estabrook Mercantile Company, substantially as provided by the Code of Civil Procedure then in force. The statement
On October 10, 1885, appellants commenced suit by attachment in the county court of Fremont county against Thomas M. Eichards and Gabriel F. Eule, as copartners, for the sum of $1,135, and levied their writ upon the same stock of merchandise of Eichards & Eule, copartners as aforesaid, which had been taken in execution by appellees. Thereupon appellants brought this action in the district court against Sheriff Eader and the Struby-Estabroók Company, to restrain the sale of said merchandise under their execution, alleging that the levy of the execution was fraudulent as to appellants by reason of the matters aforesaid, and claiming that said merchandise, being the copartnership property of Eichards & Eule as aforesaid, had become subject to the levy of appellants’ writ of attachment; and that said firm had no other property out of ■ which appellants could make their debt or any part thereof.
On the trial oral evidence was offered by appellants, showing that October 6, 1885, was the true date of filing
The finding and judgment of the court being in favor of appellees, appellants bring the case here, and ask for a reversal on the ground, inter alia, that the court below erred in rejecting the oral evidence showing the true date of the entry of the judgment by confession, and that the execution was issued thereon prior. to such entry, and in rendering judgment for appellees instead of appellants.
An objection is made -by counsel for appellees, arguendo, to the effect that the levy of the writ of attachment by appellants upon the property in controversy was invalid, because no action had been commenced in the county court at the time of the issuance and levy of said writ. The writ was issued and served on the 10th day of October, but the summons was not served until October 12th. By an amendment to section 29 of the code, passed in 1885 (but modified in 1887), it was provided
Discriminating law-wx-iters speak of judgments by con
Under statutes authorizing judgments by confession in vacation through the agency of the clerk, there being no judicial determination of the controversy, the act of giving judgment in such cases is called the “entering,” rather than the “rendering,” of judgment. Nevertheless, judgments by confession are the sentence of the law upon the matter contained in the record, the matter being supposed to be so plain, by the written admission of the defendant, as to require no judicial consideration.
As a check against abuses which might follow from committing so important a matter as the entry of judgments to the clerk without judicial supervision, it has been asserted that statutes authorizing such judgments must be strictly pursued or the judgments will be void. The rule thus stated is too broad under many circumstances. Without undertaking to lay down a rule applicable to all cases, we aré satisfied that, where a judgment has been entered by confession, without action, unless the statute authorizing such entry has been complied with in all substantial particulars, the enforcement of the judgment may be enjoined upon principles of equity at the suit of a third party prejudiced thereby; also that, if a judgment by confession be not entered in fact substantially as required by the statute, an execution in advance of such entry will be postponed in favor of a junior execution or attachment creditor who has regularly made a levy based upon valid proceedings. Freem. Judgm. §§ 543, 557, 558; Freem. Ex’ns, § 20; Ling v. King, 91 Ill. 571; Chapin v. Thompson, 20 Cal. 681; King v. French, 2 Sawy. 441; Edgar v. Greer, 7 Iowa, 136; Criswell v. Ragsdale, 18 Tex. 443; Brown v. Hathaway, 10 Minn. 303 (Gil. 238).
Appellants, being strangers to the judgment by confession entered in favor of appellees, are not concluded
The general rule in equity undoubtedly is that partnership creditors are entitled to be paid out of the partnership property, in case of the insolvency of the firm, in preference to the creditors of one or more of the individual partners. It is true a mere creditor at large of the copartnership could not, at common law, enforce such equity without first obtaining judgment and making a levy upon the copartnership assets. Having done this, he.could enforce his lien by injunction against a creditor of an individual partner or partners to restrain a sale under a similar levy. Since the levy of an attachment under our statute gives a conditional lien, a partnership creditor, having levied á valid attachment upon the property of an insolvent firm, should be permitted to have such property, or the fruits thereof, preserved until his cause can be adjudicated, and for that purpose the sale of the attached property under an execution invalid as to him may be enjoined, or the proceeds thereof retained in the .custody of the court for his benefit in case he succeeds in obtaining judgment in his favor against the firm. 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 1253; Young v. Frier, 9 N. J. Eq. 465; Case v. Beauregard, 99 U. S. 119; Breene v. Bank, 11 Colo. 97; Raynolds v. Ray, supra.
Under the view we have taken of this case, it is unnec
Reversed.