108 P. 1121 | Utah | 1910
This proceeding was instituted in this court under its original jurisdiction to obtain a writ of certiorari, which was prayed for to enable this court to review a certain order made by the district court of Salt Lake County, by which said court quashed or set aside a previous order entered by said court. The latter order directed the sale of certain personal property held under a writ of attachment issued in favor of the petitioner, and which property was held for the purpose of satisfying a judgment obtained by him in said court.
It is fundamental that “every court has power to watch, over the execution of its judgments,” and thus has the power to recall or quash an execution or order of sale that has been improvidently or irregularly issued. (Rhodes v. Smith, 66 Ala. 179; Mattocks v. Judson, 9 Vt. 343.) All courts have power to “revoke, correct, restrain, or quash their own process, in the course of their ordi-
Nor is the contention sound that the defendants had no legal right or authority to invoke the aid' of the court by motion; nor that the court had no authority to pass upon the question upon a mere motion. While, no doubt, it is the general rule that none but parties to the original or principal action who are liable to be injured can
The only case found which is directly to the contrary is Wallop v. Scarburgh, 5 Grat. (Va.) 1. There are, however some other cases which are sometimes referred to as being in harmony with the Virginia case. Some of those cases, like those from Georgia, are, however, based upon special local statutes, and hence have no special bearing upon the question, while in others, of which Hanika’s Estate, 138 Pa. St.
The real difficulty in this case, however, arises when we come to consider its real status. It is true, as counsel for the defendants contend, that the well-established rule is that property in the hands of a receiver is in the custody of the court appointing him, and cannot, without special leave of said court, legally be meddled with by any person, with or without process. It is, however, equally true that the court may, upon proper application, grant leave to a person who is interested in the property which is in the receiver’s hands to segregate it from the general mass and to sell
“So extremely jealous are courts of. equity of any interference pen-dente lite with the possession of their receivers, that they will not ordinarily permit property which is the subject of a receivership to be sold on execution. . . . The proper remedy for a judgment creditor who desires to question the receiver’s right to the property is to apply to the court appointing him to have the property released from the receiver’s custody in order that he may proceed against it under his judgment.”
In 2 Story, Eq. Jur., sec. 833a, the same thought is expressed. To the same effect is Stanton v. Heard, 100 Ala. 515, 14 South. 359. The rule is also tersely stated in 34 Cyc. 235, and is fully discussed in the same volume at page
Nor is the suggestion that the court, in quashing the so-called execution, recalled what it had authorized before of controlling force. The order of the court, authorizing the petitioner to seize the property in question, was in the nature of an adjudication that the facts and circumstances, set forth by him in his application for leave to sue
It seems to us that whether the order of sale, or so-called execution, be considered in the light of section 3080, C’omp-. Laws 1907, which provides for the sale of attached property “if judgment be recovered” in an action, or in the light afforded by section 1414, which applies to sales under the special landlord’s lien statute, the result must still be the same. In neither section is an order of sale or execution contemplated. Nor, in the absence of an express statute, can we see any good reason for any such order of sale or execution. The usual purpose of such orders or executions is to authorize the officer to seize the property of the execution debtor and to sell it as contemplated by the execution. In attachment proceedings the officer seizes and obtains possession of the property by virtue of the writ of attachment, and the statute, in express terms, authorizes the sale if a judgment is obtained. In such proceedings, therefore, the officer, in selling the attached property after judgment, acts by virtue of the statute, and not by virtue of special process. True, it may be convenient in practice, and may also be convenient for the officers and clerks, to issue a formal order of sale, but what legal efficacy- such an order has, or what authority it confers upon the officer in selling attached property that he does not possess without it, in view of our stat
In view of all the circumstances, we, after some hesitation, have been forced to the conclusions: (1) That the order made by the court setting aside the so-called execution is without force or effect; (2) that the further order of the court by which it ordered the officer not to sell the property in question was in excess of its power, and hence void and of no effect; and (3) that if the defendants had, or have, any remedy it is not by a motion by which they merely assail the order of sale, but they must, in some proceeding, assail the original order and judgment by which the property was surrendered by the court to the petitioner for the special purpose disclosed by the record and the judgment in which the court specially directed the officer to sell the property. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the pretended' order of judgment of the district court quashing said order of sale or so-called execution and restraining the officer from selling said property should be, and it accordingly is hei*eby, annulled, set aside, and held for naught. The petitioner to recover costs.