4 F. 587 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1880
This case is to be decided upon the issues
made by Freeman’s cross-bill, and stands as if he had enjoined further proceedings upon the venditioni exponas. If a sale had taken place under that writ, Dawson, the exectition plaintiff, would be entitled to the money, no matter what kind of a title had been conveyed. Hutchman’s Appeal, 27 Pa. St. 209. On the other hand, Freeman can claim nothing under the Steers writ of attachment, and it is immaterial how the ease would stand as between Steers and Dawson, or what would have been the result of a controversy between the marshal, and the sheriff on the facts of this case. Happily, that controversy is out of the way.
The facts as to the sheriff's levy are only important as throwing light on the question of abandonment by the marshal. Freeman claims that the levies were abandoned at the time the deed of trust ivas made to him, if not as to the leasehold, certainly as to the machinery, which he claims was personal property, whether the lease hold was or not, and that as to neither did the marshal keep up that dominion and control which the law requires to perfect Dawson’s title. It does not lie in the mouth of Daniel, or any one claiming under him ivith notice, to predicate upon the conduct of the marshal any claim of abandonment. If it was an illegal and unauthorized act of the judge, the clerk, or the marshal to suspend proceedings, it was a fraud on Dawson for Daniel to procure the suspension, and he can take no advantage of it. If the acts of the judge, the clerk, and the marshal were valid, the “order” did no more than suspend proceedings where it found them. An injunction may have operated to release the levy, hut not such a proceeding as that. Bisbee v. Hall, 3 Ohio, 449. Freeman’s conveyance was made while the proceedings were pending, The marshal’s return disclosed the levy, and precisely liow and in what manner it was suspended; and, moreover, Daniel -was in possession as receiver under this Steers bill, to which Dawson was a party. Freeman could not, therefore, be a purchaser without notice, even if he can be treated as a purchaser for value at all, where the trust is to secure antecedent debts. However the conduct of
I adhere, however, to the opinion expressed in the case of Dawson v. Daniel, 8 Cent. Law J. 185, that, in a strictly legal contest over this title, the facts show no such abandonment as will defeat the title of Dawson, and that without reference to any equitable consideration above mentioned. The question of abandonment is to be tested, not so much by what the marshal did, as by what he was required to do. If, for example, the placing a watchman in charge was unnecessary, his withdrawal cannot be an abandonment. The marshal was evidently trying to hold on to his levies, and all he did must be interpreted in the light of that intention. Yet, if the legal effect of his conduct was an abandonment, his intention to hold on cannot save the levies.
Let us first consider the question without reference to the disputed point whether a leasehold is real estate, and without regard to the “fixtures.” Precisely how a sheriff “seizes” or “takes in execution” a term for years, it is difficult to say from anything that has come under my observation. In Pennsylvania, although a leasehold was personal property, and was sold as such, ho deed or condemnation being required, as in the sale of lands, it was levied on and sold in the same manner as real estate, the sale and return of the sheriff operating to pass title. Williams v. Dowling, 18 Pa. St. 60; Sowers v. Vie, 14 Pa. St. 99; Dalzell v. Lynch, 4 W. & S. 255.
I take it the same method is proper in Tennessee. Thomas v. Blakemore, 5 Yerg. 113. I understand that to have been only a paper levy, and it was held that neither a deed nor registration was necessary. It is said in Freeman on Executions that, as to personal property, there must be something more than a mere pen-and-ink levy. Section 260. But this cannot apply to leaseholds, for they are incapable of anything else, and it is everwhere held that where the property is incapable of manual delivery, or is ponderous and immovable,
In England an assignment of the term was necessary to complete the sale, because of the statute of frauds, and without it the sale was void. Everywhere it was held that the purchaser must bring his ejectment to obtain possession. It was so under the statute of clcgit, which commanded the sheriff to deliver all the goods and chattels and one-half the lands to the plaintiff. And it was so under the levari facias. Under the ele,gil, the plaintiff could treat the leasehold either as chattels, and take the whole at a price, or as lands, and take one-half by extent. The sheriff could enter, if he found the gates and door open, to hold his inquisition, but for no other purpose. If he delivered the term as chattels, or extended one-half as lands, all the tenant, by eleyit, could do was to bring ejectment. So, under the fieri facias, all the sheriff did was to sell and assign the term, and the purchaser was put to his ejectment to obtain possession. There- was one exception only to this, and that was, if the execution debtor consented to surrender possession the sheriff might put his purchaser and assignee in possession under the fi. fa.; but he could not do this by force. If he happened to find the tenant absent he could not seize the possession against his will, for that would he taking forcible possession, which was not allowed. Perhaps the purchaser, if he could get possession, might, relying on his title, retain it under such circumstances, hut this principle would not authorize the sheriff to eject the debtor. Watson, Sheriff, 178, 188, 206, 212, (5 Law Library, 128, seq.;) Sewell, Sheriff, 226, (36 Law Library, 175;) 2 Saund. 68, 70, 3 Bac. Ab. tit. “Execution,” c. 4, p. 699, (Bouvier’s Ed. A. D. 1860;) Id. c. 2 p. 688; 5 Id. tit. “Leases,” p. 433; Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, § 435; The King v. Dean, 2 Show. 88; Taylor v. Cole, 3 T. R. 292; James v. Brawn, 5 B. & Ald. 243, (7 E. C. L. 83;) Hughes v. Jones, 9 Mees. & Wels. 372; Playfair v. Musgrove, 14 Mees. & Wels. 239; Rogers v. Pitcher, 6 Taunt. 207; and see Porter v. Cocke, Peck R. 34, (Tenn.)
I am of opinion, therefore, that, in making a levy on a
In Very v. Watkins, 23 How. 469, 474, it was said, even of a box of jewelry, that if the officer had a view of it, and it is in his power, he need not take actual possession, but may declare his levy without actual seizure. If any one disputes his title he may retake the property wherever he finds it. Parrish v. Danford, 1 Bond, 345. On the theory, then, that the marshal was required to levy on the leasehold as goods or chattels, his levy was complete and his title good, and he could at any time have made an actual seizure, if it became necessary. It was in his constructive possession, and that was enough. The sheriff, on that theory, was a trespasser. Owing to comity between the courts the marshal would, perhaps, not be able to turn him’out without an application to the state court itself, but the sheriff’s wrongful possession did not displace the marshal’s levy. His levy was notorious and sufficient, and the nature of the property was such that he could not and need not take any kind of actual possession. Neither the' withdrawal of the watchman nor the entry of the sheriff can, therefore, be treated as an abandonment by the marshal of his title. The fallacy of the plaintiff’s position is in supposing that to make or hold a valid levy the marshal should place a watchman in charge, or do some such significant act to manifest and keep up a manifestation of his
Does the case stand any differently as to the machinery ? If it be conceded that the machinery is to be treated as personal property, regardless of its annexation to the land, yet, owing to the fact that it was fixed to the soil, was ponderous, and incapable of manual delivery without a severance from the soil, the marshal did all he could do to make an effectual levy, and to keep it up, as I have already shown by the authorities last cited. See, also, Gladstone v. Padwick, L. R. 6 Exch. 203. It is undoubtedly true that the officer may remain on the premises where the goods he takes are situated long enough to remove them, but I think he was not required to tear down this machinery and remove it. Except for that purpose he had no right on the lot at all after he had declared his levy. He might well let it stand as he found it j until the sale, at least.
But I cannot assent to the theory that, with such machinery as this, an officer with'an execution can sever it and sell it separate and apart from the leasehold. It might not pass under a levy on the leasehold alone, and as a part of it; but that is not the question. He levied on it by name as machinery, and likewise on the leasehold, and the real question is whether he should have severed and sold; or, rather, that being his duty, whether his failure to do it was an abandonment. I am satisfied his duty was to levy, as he did, on both, and sell both together, in precisely the condition the lessee had placed it; otherwise, this valuable machinery, costing many thousands of dollars, would be unnecessarily
It is sometimes loosely said in the books that whatever the tenant can remove must be levied on and sold as personal property. This may be so as to mere utensils of trade, or trade “fixtures,” which are portable, and not seriously injured or rendered useless by severance. But not so as to structures like this. No doubt the press is valuable when severed, and can be placed on other land, but the mere cost of taking down and putting up is so great, that its value standing and ready for work is far greater, and it cannot be that a debtor can be compelled to submit to a mode of levy and sale which so deteriorates his property. If so, it could be severed and sold on an execution for any small amount. Take the case of buildings built on leasehold land with a covenant for removal. Can it be said that they must be severed and sold by the sheriff, rather than sold all together? It does not follow because the leasehold, or the structures upon it, are personal property, and are sold as such, that they are to be treated as loose or portable chattels, or that the structures are to be severed to make them so. Both being chattels, it may, in a proper case, be sold as a whole; and, if the leasehold be real estate, in the hands of the lessee, the fixtures on it must be real estate, as between him and his creditors, just as they would be if his estate was freehold. Perhaps the true theory is that the fixtures, when .of a character to be real estate, if the owner has a freehold in the land, are also real estate if he has only a leasehold with a right of removal, and that it is the right of entry, severance, and removal which is levied on and sold. But the purchaser, if the leasehold can also -be sold, buying that, has the same right to let them remain as they were, until it suits his pleasure or interest to remove them, as the lessee or execution debtor had. And, in this view, it is immaterial whether they be real estate or chattels, and I think the sheriff, in a case like this, whether he sells as real property or chattels, should sell all together.
It is not necessary to extend this opinion by reviewing the cases here cited which have led me to this conclusion. Cases
Moreover, I ain of opinion that, in Tennessee, leasehold interests are now real estate so far as concerns judgments and executions, and that this judgment was a lien upon this property. The cases already decided-in Tennessee settle this principle, though pone of them are cases of execution levies. Section 51 of the Code says that the words “real estate,” “real property,” and “land” include lands, tenements, and hereditaments, and all rights thereto and interests therein, equitable as w-ell as legal. T. and S. Code, § 51. We have seen that under the statute of elegit leaseholds were held to he included in the words limedietatern terra, sum.” Porter v.
It will be found, in examining the, subject, that ever since lands in the colonies were subjected to execution there has been, particularly in the colonial and earlier state legislation, a disposition to assimilate leaseholds, at least for long terms, to real estate. The courts sometimes construed the words “real estate” and “lands” to include them, but generally it was held those words did not. Many of the states have, by statute, made them real estate, and there is nothing novel in so treating them. This section of the Code, in my opinion, was intended especially to make leaseholds subject to the incidents of real estate where the statute does not otherwise particularly direct. The case of The People v. Westervelt, 17 Wend. 674; S. C. 20 Wend. 416; and Putnam v. Westcott, 19 J. R. 73; and the cases cited in Freeman on Executions, § 119, and other text writers, — show the growth of legislation and judicial decision in this direction of making leaseholds real estate.
In Barr v. Graves, 11 Central Law Journal, 471, the supreme court of Tennessee held that a leasehold, with its machinery and fixtures for cleaning cotton, could be seized under attachment without going on the premises or taking possession of the property. It is true, the attachment was to enforce a statutory mechanic’s lien, but the procedure would be the same, as I have endeavored to show, at common law, and without any lien. Indeed, our method of selling real estate under execution finds its archetype in the common-law mode of selling a leasehold under the fieri facias, elegit, and levari facias. The case cites with approval Kelly v. Schultze, 12 Heisk. 218; Choate v. Tighe, 10 Heisk. 621; and Pemberton v. King, supra. Mr. Justice Cooper was
In the view I have taken of this case it is unnecessary to examine the question so much argued, whether the adjudication of these questions in Dawson v. Daniel, supra, on the application for a vend, ex., is res adjudícala of the questions now made by this bill. I think it was not such an adjudication as precludes either Daniel or those claiming under him from resisting the title of the execution creditor in any appropriate way. The only question there¡y as whether a vend. ex. should issue, and that proceeding could not be converted into a trial upon affidavits of the right of property. It was a bare motion, from which not even a writ of error could be sued. Boyle v. Zacharie, 6 Pet. 656.
Let decree be entered declaring that Dawson is entitled to the money, and, after paying the costs of the suits at law, including the marshal’s commissions for sale, the balance may be paid to him. The costs of the original and supplemental bills having been already paid out of the funds, the costs incident to the cross-bills, and all costs since the agreed decree, will be paid by Freeman out of the funds in his hands as trustee. But all the parties may have a decree for their costs against Daniel.
Decree accordingly.