92 Kan. 922 | Kan. | 1914
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff sued Hicks for a balance due on a promissory note and filed an affidavit for attachment. The return of the sheriff stated that thirty-four head of cattle, the property of Hicks, were levied upon. Elmore, the interpleader, gave a bond which recited that “an order of attachment has been issued in said action, and the property of said B. H. Hicks has been attached, and is now bound therefor, which property the sheriff of said county now returns to the said B. H. Hicks, defendant in said action,” and which bound the obligors “that said property or its appraised value in money shall be forthcoming to answer the judgment of said court in said action.” The bond was given on October 19, 1912, and on November 18 Elmore asked leave to intervene, alleging that he was the owner of twenty-three head of the cattle attached. His inter-plea was verified, and the plaintiff answered by the verified allegation that Elmore was estopped from claiming the property by reason of having given a
We will notice each of the decisions relied upon to sustain the plaintiff’s position. In Nye v. Weiss, 7 Kan. App. 627, 53 Pac. 152, a redelivery bond in replevin was involved, and it was held that the defendant was estopped to deny his possession of the property at the beginning of the action. In Haxtun v. Sizer, 23 Kan. 310, the property was attached as belonging to the defendant. A bond was given by a third party, reciting that it had been so attached and that as the sheriff had delivered it to the obligor it should,be forthcoming to answer the judgment of the court in the action, or in default thereof its appraised value would be paid to the plaintiffs. After the property had been returned to the obligor judgment was obtained against the defendant in the action. Five months after making the bond the maker filed an interplea, claiming the property attached, and asked that the attachment be discharged as to such property. To this the plaintiff answered, setting up the bond, the delivery of the property, and alleging that the maker of such bond converted the property and failed to comply with the undertaking. A demurrer to this answer was sustained, and this was held to be erroneous, the syllabus reciting that “by the admission, promise, and conduct of D. & Co. they are estopped from denying that the property belongs to S.” The opinion cites and follows Sponenbarger v. Lemert, 23 Kan. 55, involving a redelivery bond in a case before
“Bonds are not made to be violated with impunity. Bonds should mean something; and when parties execute them, they should intend to fulfill them. If they bind themselves to return the property or its appraised value, they should do so. They should not be allowed to get the possession of the property by agreeing to return it or its appraised value when they never intend to return either. Parties should act in good faith; but if they do not, then the laws should be such as to compel them to do so.” (p. 96.)
In the case of Peterson v. Woollen, 48 Kan. 770, 30 Pac. 128, it was held that one who had signed a redelivery bond as surety was estopped from claiming the property as against the officers and the attaching creditor, although such surety had been induced to sign
In 1877 provision was made by statute for an inter-plea by any person claiming property attached. (Laws 1877, ch. 137, § 1.) The present civil code (§45) gives the right to any person claiming property attached as the property of another. So, unless the interpleader was barred by his own estoppel, he had a statutory right to proceed as he did. Section 200 of the civil code provides that the sheriff shall deliver the property to the person in whose possession it was found, upon his executing in the presence of the sheriff an undertaking conditioned that the property, or its appraised value in money, shall be forthcoming in answer to the judgment of the court in the action. The theory of the plaintiff appears to be that as the bond recited that the property of Hicks had been attached and was bound by the order of attachment, Elmore thereby estopped himself from claiming otherwise and that the bond obligated him to see that the property attached, or its appraised value, should be forthcoming to satisfy the j Udgment.
The defendant argues that unless Elmore in some way induced the sheriff or plaintiff to rely on the re
In Manufacturing Co. v. Bean, 20 Mo. App. 111, under statutes very similar to sections 45 and 200 of our civil code, it was held that one who gave a forthcoming bond as trustee for attached property, and before the cause came on for trial obtained leave to interplead as trustee for his beneficiary, was not estopped so to do. The bond there also recited that the property had been attached as that of the defendant. It was said that had he made no claim to the property he would have been estopped from claiming it as his own, but having given written notice, verified by his affidavit, of his claim to the property seized by the sheriff, which notice was certified to in the return, he would not be estopped; that by interpleading in the action he did not attempt to dispose of the property contrary to any judgment that might be rendered, but asked the court to render judgment in favor of his right to the property.
“Had such judgment been rendered it would hardly have been contended that the interpleader would have failed to comply with the obligations of the bond. . . . The judgment of the court was to be in accordance with the rights of all the parties in interest. By his interplea the interpleader placed the property subject to the order of the court, which was a compliance with, and not a violation of, the terms of the bond.” (p. 119.)
To a similar effect is the decision in Mansur v. Hill, 22 Mo. App. 372. In Huels v. Boettger, 40 Mo. App. 310, it was held that when the owner of property levied upon by writ of attachment against a third person,
It will be observed that in the Haxtun case there was an allegation that the claimants converted the property to their own use and failed to comply with the bond, and the estoppel was based upon the “admission, promise and conduct.” In the Hahn case the claimant kept the property until after the judgment, and then delivered it to the constable, who sold it, and it was not until after all this had been done that the claimant sued to recover the full value of the property. In the Peterson case the defendant’s wife, who claimed the property attached, sought to relieve herself from the estoppel caused by signing the bond by throwing the responsibility upon the sheriff who gave her certain legal advice Which turned out to be unsound. Indeed she claimed that she was induced to sign by fraudulent misrepresentation of the officers who took it, and this appears to have been the vital issue' tried and de
“Before the acts of one person can be successfully invoked as an estoppel by another, such other must have relied upon and been prejudiced by the acts of which he complains.” (Syl. ¶ 1.)
A more recent decision went upon the rule that estoppel must involve a lack of good faith or fair treatment. (Commission Co. v. Tate, 91 Kan. 538, 138 Pac. 602.) There an execution was issued in favor of the company and against certain parties and levied on cattle in their possession. The defendants claimed the cattle, and after the levy induced the sheriff to surrender possession to them by giving a bond reciting that they owned them and binding themselves that the property or a sufficient sum of money to answer the judgment should be forthcoming “in case it shall be
It is impossible to read the record before us without coming to the conclusion that the plaintiff by its agent directed the sheriff to levy upon these cattle after the fullest assertion of title by Elmore, supported by the declaration of Hicks. When the sheriff had been assured of a bond to hold him harmless he proceeded. In his return he recited the claim of Elmore and the fact that he had given a bond. In other words, without any deceit or any inducement except the desire to collect the debt the plaintiff company with .its eyes open took its chances in levying upon Elmore’s property to pay Hicks’ debt, and now insists that the mere recital in the bond estops him from showing the very title he asserted before the levy was made. There is no claim that he misled the plaintiff or caused it to change its position in any respect to its injury. By no possible course of reasoning could any justice or equity be found in such a claim, and no decision has been cited which compels thus rewarding the plaintiff merely because a certain recital was “nominated in the bond.”
The judgment is affirmed.