Weaver v. Wood
Weaver v. Wood
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff, by the levy of the attachment from the Fifteenth District Court, acquired a lien upon the attached property for the payment of any judgment which he might ultimately recover against Hayward. This lien was lost to
Undoubtedly that Court had the power to order the attached property to be sold in the interest of all parties, and in accordance with the provisions of Section 654 of the Practice Act. But it was clearly beyond its power to interfere with the lien of the prior attachment issued from the Fifteenth District Court, or to dispose of any portion of the fund arising from the sale other than the surplus that might remain after the satisfaction of .the appellant’s claim. The sheriff, having both attachments in his hands, knew the extent of the demand of the first attaching creditor, and must be held to have known that the Fourth District Court could only deal with the excess of the proceeds of the sale over that demand..
It follows that the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment upon the findings. Since the amount of the plaintiff’s judgment against Hayward exceeded the net proceeds of the sale of the attached property, paid by the sheriff into the Fourth District- Court, the judgment should be for an amount' equal to such net proceeds, with legal interest from the 9th day of April, 1872; that being the admitted date of the return of the execution in the case of Weaver v. Hayward, and the day from which interest is claimed in the complaint.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment for the appellant in accordance with the foregoing opinion.
Mr. Justice Crockett, being disqualified, took no part in this decision.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- P. L. WEAVER v. JOHN S. WOOD
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Sale of Attached Property.—If two attachments, issued from different District Courts, are placed in the sheriff's hands, and one is issued and levied before the other, and the sheriff levies on personal property by-virtue of both, although the Court from which the. second attachment issued may make an order for the sale of the property, it has no power to dispose of the fund arising from the sale, other than the surplus remaining after the claim of the first attaching creditor is satisfied. Sherief’s Duty as to Attachments.—If two attachments, issued out of different Courts, at different times, are placed in a sheriff’s hands, and both are levied on the same personal property, and the Court, out of which the latest attachment issues, orders the property sold, and the proceeds deposited with its clerk, and the sheriff obeys, and the money is paid to the second attaching creditor, the sheriff is liable to the first attaching creditor for the amount for which he recovers judgment, or for the amount of the proceeds, if less than the amount of the judgment.