Trabue v. Conners

84 Ky. 283 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1886

JUDGE BENNETT

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, John Conners, instituted an action in equity in the Bourbon Circuit Court against John Trabue and the appellants, for the purpose of enforcing the satisfaction of a judgment rendered in his favor against John Trabue, in the Bourbon Circuit Court, for the sum of $116.30 and $8.70 costs, upon which judgment execution issued, and was directed to the sheriff' of Bourbon county, the county of John Trabue’s residence, who returned it “no property found,” etc.

The property sought to be subjected to the satisfaction of said judgment is specifically described as one-fifth interest .in a tract of land owned by John Trabue jointly with his sister, appellants owning the other interest therein, and subject to the dower interest of appellant, Lucy D. Trabue.

Summons was served on all of the appellants to answer said action except John Trabue, which was-as to him returned not found.

Afterwards, he was proceeded against as a nonresident by constructive service, but no attachment was obtained.

The lower court rendered judgment subjecting his one-fifth interest in said property to sale for the satisfaction of said judgment debt. Prom that judgment appellants have appealed to this court.

The attorney for the appellants contends that as. there was no attachment sued out and levied upon *285the property of John Trabue, and as he was before the court alone by constructive service, the lower court had no jurisdiction to decree a sale of his property to satisfy said judgment.

A reference to the provisions of the Civil Code and the decisions thereunder will readily show the error into which the attorney has fallen.

Section 194 of the Civil Code provides that “the plaintiff may, at or after the commencement of an action, have an attachment against the property of the defendant, * * * as a security for the satisfaction of such judgment as may be recovered.”

Section 418: “No lien on the property of a defendant constructively summoned shall be created ■otherwise than by attachment, as is provided in chapter 3 of title 8, or by judgment,” etc.

Section 419: “No personal judgment shall be rendered against a defendant constructively summoned, ***** and who has not appeared in the action.”

This court, in the case of Grigsby, &c., v. Barr, &c., 14 Bush, 330, in construing the two sections of the old Code, which were similar to sections 418 and 419 supra, decided that when a statute provided a method by which the property of a non-resident might be reached, that method must be followed to the exclusion of any other not clearly pointed out.

Therefore, the Code having provided a method for subjecting the property of a non-resident defendant to the payment of any judgment that might be rendered against him, his property could not be subjected when there was no actual service of summons, *286and no appearance or no attachment or lien existing-upon the property.

■This court in that case, and others incidentally involving the same question, simply hold that in the class' of actions mentioned in section 192 of the Code to obtain a judgment for money against a defendant constructively summoned, no judgment can be rendered subjecting his property to the satisfaction of such judgment, unless the property so sought to be subjected has been attached in the action as provided in the Code of Practice, so as to create a lien thereon, whereby the court can alone acquire jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, and in that way reach the non-resident defendant constructively summoned to answer in that class of actions.

The reason of the law, as thus ruled in that class of actions, is plain. In them, the defendant being merely constructively summoned, the court has no jurisdiction of him in personam — no personal judgment can be rendered against him. Therefore, in order that the-court may reach him through his property, it must have jurisdiction of his propertju It must be brought before the court, that the court may take hold of it, which can only be done by the assertion of a lien on which the court may act. If the lien does not exist on the property in behalf of the plaintiff, by contract, statute, or equitable lien, then, in order to give the court jurisdiction, the lien must be created by attachment as provided by section 418 of the Code, which is the only way that the court, in that class of actions, can create a lien on his property, so as to-acquire jurisdiction to subject it to the satisfaction of any judgment rendered in the action.

*287We still adhere to the construction given to the provisions of the sections of the Code above quoted, as applied to that class of actions. But the case at bar does not come within that class.

Here, the action was brought under chapter 4, title 10, of the Civil Code of Practice, section 439 of which provides, in substance, that after an execution of fieri facias has been returned by the proper officer, in' substance no property found, the plaintiff in the execution may institute an' equitable action for the discovery of any money, chose in action, or other property, whether legal or equitable, which, the defendant may own or have an interest in, and for subjecting the same to the satisfaction of the judgment.

Section 441 provides that the “ plaintiff in the execution may have an attachment against the property of the defendant similar to the general attachments provided for in chapter 3, title 8, without either the affidavit or bond therein required.”

Section 442 provides that “a, lien shall be created on the property of the defendant by the levy of the attachment, or by the service of the summons, with the object of the action indorsed thereon,” etc.

In the class of actions coming under this chapter of the Code a lien may be acquired on the defendant’s property, of whatever kind, in manner as follows:

1st. If the property sought to be subjected is specifically described in the petition, then no attachment levy is necessary to give a lien on the property of the defendant. The lien in such a case is independent of the Code.

*288It is an auxiliary action in the nature of a discovery in aid of a judgment which had been recovered in an action between the same parties, and shown not to be satisfied by a return of “ nulla bona/” and plaintiff, if the property discovered is specifically described in the action, has a lien upon it for the satisfaction of the judgment. Therefore, in such a case no attachment levy is necessary to create a lien on the property. It is true, in such a case, the plaintiff, under the Code, may have an attachment also against the property of the defendant, but it is not necessary to create a lien.

If, however, the petition does not specifically describe the property, but seeks to discover unknown or unspecified property, then no lien is created by the action, and the plaintiff would have to obtain and levy an attachment on the property that might be discovered in order to create a lien upon it. (See Ward's Adm'rs v. Robinson, &c., 1 Bush, 295; Murphy, &c., v. Cochran's Trustee, 80 Ky., 240.) So the distinction between the first class of cases mentioned and this class is plain. In the first class, if no lien exists upon the property by contract, statute or in equity, nor by the nature of the action, a lien can, therefore, be created on the property of the defendant constructively summoned only by the levy of an attachment. In the other class, where the property is specifically described in the petition, a lien is thereby created upon it, and the court, therefore, has jurisdiction of it, and may apply it to the payment of the non-resident’s debt.

It would hardly be contended that in an action to enforce a lien upon land for the purchase money, or *289to foreclose a mortgage lien, or to enforce any statutory lien against the property of a non-resident defendant constructively summoned, a levy of an attachment upon the property would be necessary to give the court jurisdiction.

Every one would agree that as there was an enforceable lien upon the property, which would give the court jurisdiction of it in an action against the defendant constructively summoned, it would be wholly unnecessary to create another lien by the levy of an attachment in order to give the court jurisdiction, when it already had it.

As the petition created a lien upon the property of the defendant which gave the court jurisdiction, we think it was not necessary to levy an attachment upon the property.

We think, also, the court below did right in sustaining the demurrer to appellee’s answer.

We also think the court did not err in refusing to order the interest of John Trabue in said tract of land set apart before the sale of it.

Wherefore the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.

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