Thomas v. Hillhouse

17 Iowa 67 | Iowa | 1864

Cole, J.

1. Evidence: dates. I. It is clear from the agreed statement of facts, that the execution defendants, Green, Thomas & Co., sold all their interest in the safe to the plaintiffs before the service oí the garnishee process upon the lessees, Lauman, Hedge & Co., unless the bill of sale was ante-dated. Upon the question as to the date of the bill of sale, there is no evidence whatever, nor is there anything in the agreed statement of facts relating thereto, except the bill of sale itself, and its acknowledgment, which was near three years after its date. The fact that it was acknowledged long after its date, is not alone sufficient to raise the presumption that *70it was ante-dated, for it may very properly, as it often does happen, that an instrument is not acknowledged until after its date. But, further than this, it seems to us that a fair construction of the language used in the agreed statement of facts, shows that it was conceded that the paper was truly dated. It is as follows: “ The paper under which the plaintiffs claim, was delivered to E. H. Thomas, as agent of plaintiff, who was also a member of the firm of Green, Thomas & Go., hut defendants knew nothing of it until the time hereinbefore stated,” to wit: the time of its acknowledgment and filing for record. At all events, the presumption of law that the instrument was executed on the day it bears date, together with the agreed statement of facts, as to its delivery, &o., is quite sufficient to repel any presumption of its being ante-dated, arising from its acknowledgment so long after its date.

2. Recording act: possession. II. It is conceded, in the agreed statement of facts, that neither the defendant, the plaintiffs in the execution, by virtue of which he held the safe, nor their attorneys, had any knowledge or notice whatever of the sale of the safe to the plaintiffs in this action, till the 80th day of April,' 1861, the day the bill of sale was acknowledged and filed for record. The question therefore arises, whether the plaintiffs can hold the safe as against the garnishee creditor who is represented by this sheriff, defendant. Our statute is as follows: Revision, “ Section 2201 (1193). No sale or mortgage of personal property, where the vendor or mortgagor retains actual possession thereof, is valid against existing creditors or subsequent purchasers without notice, unless a written instrument conveying the same is executed, acknowledged like conveyances of real estate, and filed for record with the recorder of deeds of the county where the holder of the property resides.”

This case, however, is not within either the letter or the *71spirit of the statute. The vendor, in this case, did not “retain the actual possession” of the safe; it had been leased to and was in the actual possession of Lauman, Hedge & Co., who were entitled to and did retain such actual possession for the term of three years. This case is not, therefore, within the letter of the law. The object and purpose of the statute was to prevent persons from acquiring or retaining credit, by reason of the possession of personal property, which possession, in the eyes of the law, is evidence of ownership, and to protect purchasers thereof from the fraud which might otherwise be practiced upon them by persons in possession of such property, and thus the ostensible owners of it. This case shows that Green, Thomas & Co. were not in the actual possession of the safe, and therefore could not thereon acquire or retain credit, or make sale and delivery to a purchaser on the faith of such possession, and this case is not therefore within the spirit of the statute. ..

3. Attachment: unrecorded conveyance. Again, there can be no question, that as'between ^ vendors, Green, Thomas & Co., and the plain-title to the safe passed absolutely and completely at the time of the purchase and payment of the price; and as between them, it was neither necessary to make an actual delivery of the safe, nor to execute a written bill of sale, or have the same recorded. The question then arises, what rights did the garnishee creditors acquire by virtue of the service of the garnishee process ? Mr. Drake, in his excellent treatise on the law of suits by attachment, says: “It is a well-settled principle, that an attaching creditor can acquire through his attachment, no higher or better rights to the property or assets attached, than the defendant had when the attachment took place, unless he can show some fraud or collusion by which his rights are impaired. No interest subsequently acquired by the defendant in the attached property will be affected by *72the attachment. If the property when attached, is subject to a lien Iona fide placed upon it by the defendant, that lien must be respected, and the attachment postponed to it.” Drake on Attachment, §223. This, it is shown, is equally true and applicable, where the lien is acquired by the service of garnishee process, as where the property itself is directly seized. Whether the garnishee process arises upon and is executed under a writ of attachment or a writ of execution, can make no difference in the rights of the parties under it.

4. Judicial sale without notice, It follows, therefore, that the rights of the defendant in this case, can be no greater than the rights of the execution defendants at the time of the service of the . _ . - - , garnishee process. And we have just seen that such execution defendants had no rights to the safe, whatever, at that time, as against these plaintiffs, and, therefore, the defendant acquired none. If there had been a sale of the safe under the process, before any notice of the plaintiffs’ rights thereto, such fact would, doubtless, materially change the rights of the parties. What we hold, is simply this : that when, in the absence of any fraud, the execution defendants have sold their interest in the property before seizure under the process, although notice of such sale is not brought home to the execution plaintiffs or their officer until after such seizure, the rights acquired under the sale are paramount to those acquired under the process. In thus holding, we follow previous adjudications by this court. See Allison et al. v. Barrett, 16 Iowa, 278, and authorities there cited.

The same principle has also been settled by this court as applicable to real estate; and, accordingly, it has been held that a purchaser of real estate, whose deed remained unrecorded at the date of the rendition of the judgment against the vendor and levy of the execution thereon, has rights to such real estate, paramount to those of the judgment *73and execution plaintiff. Norton, Jewett & Busty v. Williams, 9 Iowa, 528; Bell v. Evans et al., 10 Iowa, 853. Such being the rule as applicable to real estate, it should a fortion be held applicable to personal property.

5. Principal and agent: conflict, etc. III. It is further objected, .that E. H. Thomas, one of the firm of Green, Thomas & Go., who acknowledged the bill sa^e> a^s0 acted as the agent for plaintiffs, and, as such, filed the bill of sale for record, and manage¿ ^gjj, interest in the property for them. There was no such conflict of interest in such relations, as would preclude him from so acting as their agent. This question was also settled by this court in the case of the Randolph Bank v. Armstrong, Garnishee, 11 Iowa, 515.

These plaintiffs were not parties to the judgment upon which the execution issued, under which the garnishee proceedings were had, nor to the garnishee proceedings themselves, and cannot, therefore, be bound or concluded by them. The judgment is affirmed.

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