230 N.W. 516 | Iowa | 1930
On September 6, 1929, the appellee commenced his action against the defendant Schechinger, and caused an attachment to be issued and levy to be made on certain real estate belonging to said defendant. On October 2, 1929, the defendant Schechinger filed his answer, and also a counterclaim on the attachment bond, alleging that the grounds upon which said writ of attachment was sued out were untrue. While said action was pending, to wit, on November 8, 1929, the defendant Schechinger confessed judgment in favor of the intervener. On November *225 12, 1929, judgment was rendered against the defendant Schechinger in favor of the plaintiff in the attachment proceedings, and said judgment was established as a lien on the property of said defendant from the date of said attachment, to wit, September 6, 1929. On November 14, 1929, the appellee caused a general execution to issue, and levy was made thereunder upon the attached property. Thereafter, to wit, on December 26, 1929, the intervener filed its petition of intervention, wherein it set up its said judgment against the defendant Schechinger, and alleged that said writ of attachment was illegal for the reason that the grounds set forth in the petition of the appellee for the issuance of said attachment, — to wit, that the defendant was disposing of his property with intent to defraud his creditors, — did not exist. Issue was joined by the appellee upon the petition of intervention, and upon hearing, the court dismissed said petition of intervention; and it is from said ruling that the intervener prosecutes this appeal.
I. The ultimate question for our determination is whether or not an intervener in an attachment suit can question the truthfulness of the statutory grounds of attachment alleged in the petition under which the writ of attachment was issued. The appellant relies upon the provisions of Section 12136, Code, 1927, which is as follows:
"Any person other than the defendant may, before the sale of any attached property, or before the payment to the plaintiff of the proceeds thereof, or any attached debt, present his petition verified by oath to the court, disputing the validity of the attachment, or stating a claim to the property or money, or to an interest in or lien on it, under any other attachment or otherwise, and setting forth the facts upon which the claim is founded."
Code Section 12137 is as follows:
"The petitioner's claim shall be in a summary manner investigated. The court may hear the proof or order a reference, or may impanel a jury to inquire into the facts. If it is found that the petitioner has a title to, a lien on, or any interest in such property, the court shall make such order as may be necessary to protect his rights." *226
It is appellant's contention that by reason of the statute he is entitled to intervene in the proceedings and "dispute the validity of the attachment," and that he may do so by traversing the allegations of the petition in respect to the grounds of the attachment. The proceedings in respect to attachment are statutory, and are embodied in Chapter 510 of the Code of 1927.
Code Section 12091 is as follows:
"The fact stated as a cause of attachment shall not be contested in the action by a mere defense. The defendant's remedy shall be on the bond, but he may in his discretion sue thereon by way of counterclaim, and in such case shall recover damages as in an original action on such bond."
Under this section it is clear that the facts stated as a ground for the attachment cannot be contested by the defendant in the action by merely interposing the defense of denial, or by answer specifically traversing the allegations of the petition with respect to said grounds of attachment. Under Code Section 12139, a defendant in an attachment case may move to discharge the attachment at any time before trial "for insufficiency of statement of cause thereof;" but this remedy is only available to the defendant in the attachment suit. An intervener has no standing to file such a motion. Also, under Section 12091, a defendant's remedy for damages in an attachment action may be by a separate action on the bond, or he may counterclaim on the bond in the original action; but in either event, the defendant in the case is limited to a recovery on the bond, and cannot traverse the grounds of the attachment by mere defense to the action. Such in the statute, and such is our holding.
In Peters v. Snavely-Ashton,
"In the absence of defect in the proceedings or bond, a motion to discharge the writ will not lie. The alleged grounds of an attachment cannot be controverted by evidence for the purpose of quashing the writ. They can be traversed in the main action only by a counterclaim on the bond."
In Security Sav. Bank v. Cimprich,
"The contention is that, inasmuch as he is resident in the state of Iowa, no judgment can be entered against him except *227 after personal service of original notice, and that a notice by publication cannot be effective to confer jurisdiction upon the court over an actual resident of the state. This ground of attack upon the jurisdiction of the court is an attempt to traverse those averments of the petition which constitute the grounds of attachment. It has been our universal holding for more than fifty years that such grounds are not subject to traverse, except in an action upon the attachment bond. This is the attachment defendant's sole remedy for wrongful issuing of an attachment. He may avail himself of it by an action on the bond, and such action may be set up as a counterclaim in the attachment suit, or it may be prosecuted independently of the attachment suit."
It is the contention of the appellant, however, that, under Section 12136, an intervener is given the right of "disputing the validity of the attachment," and may do so by a petition of intervention traversing the allegations of the petition as to the grounds of the attachment.
The provisions of the statute permitting intervention in an attachment suit and providing that the intervener may present his petition "disputing the validity of the attachment" first became a part of our statutory law in the Revision of 1860. The precise question presented by the intervener does not appear to have been previously before this court. Whipple v. Cass,
In Markley, Alling Co. v. Keeney,
"It is said: `The plaintiffs have not shown that they had an attachment good against the intervener.' It seems to us the proposition is not involved in this trial. The intervener's right to the property does not depend upon the character of the attachment, — that is, whether valid or invalid. He comes asking for the property as his because of his purchase before the attachment. An invalid attachment would give him no right to the property. He has no rights in the property unless he is the owner, and it is determined that he is not."
It is the general rule that the debtor alone has the right to assail the attachment on the ground that the allegations upon which the writ was issued are untrue. Meyer, Bannerman Co. v.Keefer,
We do not think that Code Section 12136 and Section 12137 are intended to change this rule. Under said sections, a party having an interest in, claim to, or lien upon the attached property may intervene, and assert his claim thereto in the attachment proceedings. His claim shall be heard in a summary manner, and if he has such a title to, lien on, or any interest in said property, the court shall make such order as may be necessary to protect his rights. In such a sense, and for such a purpose, the intervener may "dispute the validity" of the attachment, but this does not give the intervener the right to contest the truthfulness of properly alleged grounds for the attachment.
Construing the statute as we do, we reach the conclusion that the trial court did not err in dismissing the intervener's petition, and the judgment is — Affirmed.
*230MORLING, C.J., and EVANS, KINDIG, and GRIMM, JJ., concur.