39 Cal. 543 | Cal. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court, Rhodes, C. J., and Temple, J., concurring :
The plaintiff sues to recover certain machinery for a quartz mill, which he avers the defendant has converted to his own use. The machinery was originally the property of the Mitchell and Owens Mining Company, from which company the plaintiff deraigns his title through a judgment and execution against the company, a Sheriff’s sale to one Mitchell, and a conveyance from Mitchell to this plaintiff. The defendant is a common carrier, and, as such, contracted with the mining company to transport the machinery from
To defeat the plaintiff’s recovery the defendant insists: First—That the judgment, execution and Sheriff’s sale under which Mitchell, the plaintiff’s grantor, acquired his title, was fraudulent and collusive, and was intended to
The second point of the defendant is equally without merit*. The sale to Mitchell occurred prior to the time when the defendant instituted his action to enforce his lien, and if the judgment which he recovered be treated as a simple money judgment, he acquired no title by his attachment and execution sale, for the obvious reason that the mining company then had no title to be conveyed. All its interest in the property had already been sold and conveyed to Mitchell. On the other hand, if the defendant’s judgment against the company be deemed to be a judgment to enforce his lien, it was unavailing for that purpose as against Mitchell, who had acquired the title of the company,'and was, therefore, a necessary party to the action. Not having been made a defendant, and being in no manner privy to it, so far as the proof shows, he was in no respect affected by it. As to him the judgment was void. This brings us to the last point, to wit: whether or not the defendant has a valid, subsisting lien on the property. If it be conceded that there was no abandonment of the possession by leaving the property at Gamp Independence, under the circumstances shown by the proofs, we are, nevertheless, of the opinion that the lien was lost by the suing out an attachment and levying it on the machinery.In order to procure the attachment the defendant was required by the statute to
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
By Sprague, J. : I concur in the judgment.
Wallace, J., expressed no opinion.