210 P. 667 | Mont. | 1925
In March, 1922, two actions were commenced in the district court of Fergus county designated by numbers upon the register of actions 10869 and 10870. In the first action, in which Albert W. Ogg and Ralph R. Ogg were plaintiffs, and J.C. Herman and J.H. Coffey were defendants, plaintiffs sought to enforce performance of a contract for the sale of real estate; that is, they sought to compel defendants, purchasers, to accept a conveyance and to pay $3,000, the contract price for the land. In the second action, in which Albert W. Ogg alone was plaintiff and Herman and Coffey were defendants, the same character of relief was sought, but the purchase price in that instance was $2,500. Such proceedings were had that plaintiffs in the first action recovered the judgment they sought, and in the second action Albert W. Ogg recovered the judgment he sought. From the judgment entered in the second action the defendants appealed, and by stipulation of the parties cause 10869 was to abide the decision of the supreme court in cause 10870. In June, 1924, this court reversed the judgment in cause 10870 and awarded the costs of appeal to defendants Herman and Coffey. (
When the mandate of this court in cause 10870 went down, the[1] two actions were left pending in the district court as though a trial of either on the merits had never occurred; but the filing of the cost bill in 10870 had the effect of the entry of a judgment for $94 in favor of Herman and Coffey and against Albert W. Ogg upon which execution might issue. (Sec. 9805, Rev. Codes; State ex rel. Hurley v. District Court,
(1) Was the interest of Albert W. Ogg in each of the causes of action the subject of seizure and sale in satisfaction of the judgment against him?
Section 9424, Revised Codes, provides that all property, real or personal, and any interest therein, of the judgment debtor, not exempt, is subject to seizure on execution. Causes of action are not included in the exemptions enumerated in the statute; hence if these causes of action constitute property, or an interest in property, they were liable to seizure and sale in this instance.
A cause of action is the right which a party has to institute[2] a judicial proceeding. (Dillon v. Great Northern Ry.Co.,
In the common parlance of the law, a thing in action is designated a chose in action. Chose in action means literally thing in action. (Belden v. Farmers' etc. Bank,
The supreme court of the United States has said that a chose in action "included all debts and all claims for damages for breach of contract or for tort connected with contract." (Bushnell v. Kennedy, 9 Wall. 387, 390,
While courts, text-writers and legislators have not always distinguished sharply between the right to recover and the thing to be recovered, there cannot be any question that the right to recover is comprehended in the term "chose in action." (3 Streets' Foundation of Legal Liability, p. 81.)
It may be that our Code definition, above, restricts somewhat the meaning of the phrase, but since in each of the actions, 10869 and 10870, Albert W. Ogg asserted his right to recover a definite sum of money, the right so asserted is a chose in action within the meaning of our statute, and within the meaning of the phrase as employed in the authorities generally. Anciently a chose in action was denied one of the ordinary incidents of property, namely, the characteristic of transferability, but that restriction was removed many years ago. In Darlington on Personal Property, page 9, it is said: "Choses in action having now become assignable [in the reign of Henry VII] became an important kind of personal property," and no one would have the temerity at this late day *360
to insist that a chose in action is not property of some character. It is personal property under all of the authorities. (Boyd v. Selma,
In Digney v. Blanchard,
Since each of Albert W. Ogg's causes of action is a chose in action, and a chose in action is personal property, it follows, by the provisions of section 9424, above, that those causes of action were subject to seizure and sale in satisfaction of the judgment against him. (Raymond v. Blancgrass,
(2) In what manner may the sheriff levy upon a cause of[3] action? That he may subject a chose in action to sale in some manner is not left open to doubt, for section 9431 declares that he must proceed against the property of the judgment debtor by levying the execution upon a sufficient amount of property, "collecting or selling the things in action, and selling the other property." Section 9424 provides that "property, both real and personal, or any interest in either real or personal property, and all other property not capable of manual delivery, may be attached on execution, in like manner as upon writs of attachment." Section 9262 provides with great particularity the manner in which the sheriff must proceed under a writ of attachment. That section comprises *361 six subdivisions, the first two of which refer to the attachment of real property. Subdivision 3 relates to the attachment of personal property capable of manual delivery in the possession of the defendant, Subdivision 4 relates to the attachment of stocks or shares of corporations, and subdivision 6 relates to the attachment of judgments. Subdivision 5 refers to attachment of (a) debts or credits, (b) personal property not capable of manual delivery, and (c) personal property in the possession of a third person.
We may eliminate from our consideration the first and third classes. Speaking with technical strictness, a thing in action is the very antithesis of a thing in possession, and it follows that a cause of action cannot be in the possession of anyone, and it goes without saying that it is not capable of manual delivery. But the person who has a cause of action has control of it; he may enforce it or may waive his right to do so, and he may transfer it to another. Subdivision 5 above, then, so far as applicable to the attachment of a cause of action, provides that the officer shall execute the writ by leaving with the person having control of the property, or with his agent, a copy of the writ and a notice that the property under his control belonging to the defendant is attached in pursuance of the writ; in other words, the sheriff was required to leave a copy of the writ and the notice with Albert W. Ogg, the person who had control of the property — the causes of action. The return of the sheriff discloses that he delivered a copy of the writ and the notice to the clerk of the district court only, and the record discloses affirmatively that Albert W. Ogg did not receive either — indeed, that he was absent for a long time before the execution was issued and continuously thereafter until some time subsequent to the date of the sale. Since the provisions of the statute were not observed, the officer failed in his attempt to make a valid levy, (Wilson v. Harris,
(3) Did the failure of the sheriff to observe the directions of the statute with reference to the levy render the sale absolutely void or only voidable? The purpose of the levy is to[4] subject the property to the custody of the law and place it beyond the power of the judgment debtor to transfer it or divert it to any other use or purpose. (Britannia Mining Co. v.United States F. G. Co.,
In 2 Freeman on Executions, section 274, it is said: "The various acts which the sheriff is by statute required to perform are generally regarded as directory merely, and not as being essential to give him power to sell." (See, also, Burton v.Kipp,
We conclude, therefore, that the sale was not absolutely void, but only voidable.
(4) Did the trial court have authority to set the sale aside upon the motion which was made? It is urged for the purchaser[5] that the proceeding by motion in the original action to which she was not a party is a collateral attack upon the sale, but with this we do not agree. By making the purchase, the purchaser becomes a party in interest (2 Freeman on Executions, sec. 305), and in any event the proceeding is a direct and not a collateral attack within the *363
generally recognized definitions of those terms (Burke v.Interstate S. L. Assn.,
While counsel for the purchaser concede that under certain[6] circumstances an execution sale may be set aside upon motion, they insist vigorously that the motion in this instance, based solely upon the ground that the sheriff did not levy upon the property he assumed to sell, does not present a case which authorizes a court, by motion or otherwise, to set aside a sale as against a purchaser who was not a party to the action in which the execution issues.
The authorities all agree that the procedure to set aside an execution sale is by motion or by an independent action (23 C.J. 682; 2 Freeman on Executions, sec. 305); but whether the one remedy or the other is available in a given instance is a subject of some controversy.
Counsel for the purchaser rely largely upon the decision inBryan v. Berry,
In Ford v. California Inv. Co.,
Notwithstanding these later decisions by the California court, it is insisted that Bryan v. Berry is still authority for the position which the purchaser in this proceeding assumes, viz., that the court below was without authority to set aside the sale upon motion based upon the ground that the sheriff did not levy upon the property he assumed to sell — a ground manifestly insufficient to warrant relief in equity. (23 C.J. 685.) In other words, it is contended that a sale to a third person not a party to the action can be set aside only for causes which would be sufficient to give a court of equity jurisdiction to set it aside, and that this is all that was decided in Thompson v.Superior Court, or in Ford v. California Inv. Co. We do not think that the effect of those decisions can be circumscribed to this extent. Bryan v. Berry held directly that, when property is sold to a third person not a party to the action in which the execution issued, a motion to set aside the sale *365 will not lie. By overruling that decision the court held that in a proper case a motion will be entertained to set aside an execution sale, even though the purchaser is not a party to the action in which the writ issued, and these later cases are in harmony with the preponderant authority. It is true that inThompson v. Superior Court it was said that a motion to set aside an execution sale may be grounded upon any equitable principle which would give jurisdiction to a court of equity, but it was not said, and manifestly was not intended to convey the idea, that a motion would lie only for reasons which would give a court of equity jurisdiction to set the sale aside.
In Browne v. Ferrea,
In Anglo-Californian Bank v. Cerf,
In Humboldt S. L. Soc. v. March,
In view of these decisions, it cannot be said that the California court has gone further than to place itself in harmony with the prevailing opinion in this country.
In 23 Cyc. 682, it is said: "The general rule is that a proceeding to set aside a sale under execution may be and *366 generally should be by motion, unless the character of the controversy is such that it cannot in justice to all concerned be determined upon such an informal presentation."
In Rorer on Judicial Sales, section 852, the author says: "The application to set a sale aside should ordinarily be made first by motion to the same court from whence the process of execution issued."
In 10 R.C.L. 1320, it is said: "Generally, the aggrieved party proceeds by motion in the court from which the execution issued."
In 2 Freeman on Executions, section 310, the author says: "No doubt an execution sale may be vacated by motion made to the court and in the case whence the writ issues." The text is amply supported by the authorities. (23 C.J. 682; see, also, Bernard
v. Herzog,
While the authorities agree that a court may, upon motion, set aside an execution sale, the grounds upon which the motion may be granted are so various as to defy complete enumeration. (2 Freeman on Executions, sec. 308.) Speaking generally, trivial irregularities in the writ or the levy do not constitute sufficient ground particularly where no injury appears to have been suffered by an interested party (23 C.J. 672); but, as said by Freeman in the section just cited: "Every motion for quashing a sale is to be determined with reference to all the attendant circumstances under which the writ was executed. If the proceedings all appear to be fair, if no undue advantages have been taken, if the prices realized are not disproportionate to the value of the property sold, then the sale cannot be avoided, except for irregularities of the gravest character. If, on the other hand, the proceedings have been marked by harshness and oppression, or connected with circumstances indicating an attempt to obtain an unconscionable advantage, or if the property has manifestly been sacrificed, or if any other serious wrong has resulted to anyone from the sale, the courts will *367 gladly seize upon any irregularity, and perhaps magnify its importance, in order to find a legal justification for such measures as will clearly subserve the ends of justice."
In 23 Corpus Juris, 670, it is said: "The sale cannot be set aside except for some good and sufficient reason, but may be set aside for about the same reasons that judicial sales, in the strict meaning of the term, may be set aside. Where the motion is made in due season and by a proper party, the sale will generally be set aside if there has been a mistake, irregularity, or fraud in the conduct thereof, to the prejudice of either party to the action, or to a third person." With reference to judicial sales, the same authority declares: "Since the law aims to uphold such sales, it follows that the court, in the exercise of its discretion, will not, as a rule, set aside the sale for mere informalities or irregularities, or slight, trivial, and immaterial defects in the proceedings, or causes which the parties in interest might, with a reasonable degree of diligence, have avoided, especially at the instance of one who acquiesced in the irregularities. * * * But where the irregularities are such as to have worked hardship, injustice, or unfairness, or have been coupled with inadequacy of price, a sale may be set aside." (35 C.J. 98.)
As said by the California court in Humboldt S. L. Soc. v.[7] March, above, the question whether an execution sale shall be set aside upon motion for irregularities in the writ, or in its execution, is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and with this we agree.
These considerations, at least, were present to move the discretion of the court:
The sale, if permitted to stand, would convey absolutely all the interest of Albert W. Ogg in the action to recover $3,000 and his entire cause of action for the recovery of $2,500. (Sec. 9440, Rev. Codes.)
He was not afforded the information that his property was about to be sold, which service of a copy of the execution and the notice would have conveyed. *368
He was absent for a long time prior to the date upon which the execution was issued and during all of the proceedings until after the sale was made.
He moved promptly to have the sale set aside and tendered into court the full amount paid by the purchaser, which amount was sufficient to satisfy the judgment against him.
Under these circumstances, it cannot be said that the court abused its discretion in vacating the sale and canceling the certificate of sale.
This proceeding was instituted to secure a writ of supervisory control, or other appropriate writ. A writ of review was issued, but we have not confined ourselves to a consideration of the purchaser's rights under that writ alone, but have treated the questions, presented by the briefs, upon the merits.
Our conclusion is that the purchaser does not disclose a right to any relief from this court, and therefore the proceeding is dismissed.
Dismissed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES GALEN, STARK and MATTHEWS concur.