Wilbur v. Flannery

60 Vt. 581 | Vt. | 1888

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Powers, J.

In execution of a decree of the Court of Chancery the defendant was ordered to deposit his deed of certain real estate in Underhill with the clerk of that court, upon a deposit with the clerk for the defendant of a certain sum of money. The money and deed were both deposited *583with the clerk m accordance with the decree. The deed was accepted and taken by the party entitled, and the money was ready to be paid to the defendant when it was attached by the plaintiff.

Both parties agree that money in custodia legis. cannot be attached by the trustee process; and the inquiry is whether the legal grip upon this money had been dissolved.

Our statute is broad and subjects the goods, effects and credits of a debtor in the hands of a' third person to the trustee process.

The attaching creditor in such process stands upon the right which his debtor has as against the trustee.

In this case Mr. Bay held money in his hands belonging to the defendant. As clerk of the court he had no further claim upon it. The purpose for which the law gave him its custody had been fully accomplished, and the only duty remaining was to pay-it over to the defendant upon his call. If Mr. Bay had refused to pay it to the defendant on demand, the defendant clearly would have an action for the money. This being so, the plaintiff, as a creditor of the defendant, may reach the fund by this process.

The only answer made by the defendant is, that, on grounds of public policy, public officials should not be subjected to the trustee process ; and this proposition is abundantly fortified by the exhaustive citation of authorities in the defendant’s brief. But this case is outside the range of that proposition. Mr. Bay was a mere bailee of the money, not for the court, nor for the parties to the litigation. As respects the deed and the money, which was to be exchanged, each for the other, he was the stakeholder appointed to effect the exchange. Any third person might as well have been appointed as the clerk. A sheriff who has collected money upon an execution is liable to the trustee process. He receives such money under color of his office, and holds it as a public officer. But his process has no further vitality when the money is collected, and he has no remaining duty but to pay over the money.

*584In this case, if Mr. Eay had held the money to be paid oyer when the court should so order, he would be exempt from liability. But the order from the court to pay it over antedated its receipt by him, and he was directed to pay when the deed was delivered.

We can see no reason, under the language of our statute, why a clerk, under the circumstances detailed in the commissioner’s report, should not be liable to the trustee process. The ai’gument that he may be personally inconvenienced by being called away from his business applies to every other person exposed to this process.

The judgment is reversed, and judgment is rendered on the report that the trustee is chargeable in the amount of the plaintiff’s judgment against the principal debtor, and that the trustee recover his costs.