Larsen v. Richards

Utah Supreme Court
Larsen v. Richards, 43 Utah 196 (Utah 1913)
134 P. 583; 1913 Utah LEXIS 62
Frick, McCarty, Straup

Larsen v. Richards

Opinion of the Court

FRICK, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Davis County to recover upon an implied contract for board and lodging. When the action was commenced the plaintiff, pursuant to Comp. Laws 1907, section 3064, also made and filed his affidavit, in which he alleged the necessary facts for which a writ of attachment may be issued, and such writ was accordingly issued. However, when the writ was about to be served by the sheriff of D'avis County by levying upon and taking into his possession two horses which the plaintiff claimed were owned by the defendant S. W. Richards, one Herbert Tullett, in whose possession the horses then were, made some claim to them. Tullett, upon condition that the horses should be released from the attachment, .agreed to deposit with the clerk of the court of Davis County, for the sheriff of said county, the sum. of $500, the same being in excess of plaintiff’s claim; said money to be held for the benefit of the plaintiff in the action until the action was finally determined. The clerk issued the following receipt for the money:

*198“Received of H. Tullett $500 to be delivered to Fred Harris (tbe sheriff) of Davis County.” Tbe foregoing receipt was presented to tbe sheriff, who indorsed thereon tbe following :
“I hereby have received tbe order for tbe release of tbe horses on a bond of $500 in case of A. C. Larsen v. S. W. Richards and Wife. Dated October 14, 1912.” The horses were then left in Tulletffs possession, and the $500 was received by the sheriff in lien of what is sometimes-called “bail,” or security for the judgment, if any is obtained in the action by the plaintiff against the defendant therein. By an examination of the answer which was subsequently filed the purpose for which‘the deposit was made-is clearly seen. In that pleading after admitting that the defendants became indebted to the plaintiff for “lodging,” it is averred that said defendants, for the purpose of securing said indebtedness, “pledged and deposited with the said plaintiff” a certain jewel of the value of $135, which,, it is averred, plaintiff agreed to hold “as collateral security for the payment of said indebtedness.” It is then further averred that plaintiff had not accounted for said jewel and demand is made that he be required to do so. Defendants then proceed to aver that notwithstanding plaintiff had received and retained said jewel for the purposes aforesaid,, he, nevertheless, commenced this action, and caused a writ' of attachment to issue therein, and “pursuant to the writ of attachment” threatened to “take possession of certain property then in the possession of the defendant S. W. Richards; that the said defendant S. W. Richards, being compelled to do so, by reason of the threatened levy of an attachment upon his said property, caused to be deposited with the-sheriff of Davis County, state of Utah, on the 14th day of October, 1912, the sum of $500 lawful money of the United States, to be held by the said sheriff, subject to the order of this court, and to be applied in discharge of any judgment which might be rendered in favor of the plaintiff herein,, and against the said defendants.”

*199The other portions of the answer are not material, and the part we have set forth is material only as showing the purpose for which the $500 was delivered and received, and that both parties clearly understood such purpose. The two horses upon which the attachment was levied, or about to be levied, were accordingly left with Mr. Tullett, and he and the defendant Richards could do with them as they thought best, which they did by taking them out of the state. Notwithstanding the fact that the $500 deposit was to await the final determination of the action, some time after the defendants had answered, Mr. Tullett sought to intervene therein by filing a motion, supported by affidavits, in which he asked that the money deposited as aforesaid be returned to him. It is not necessary to set forth the statements contained in the affidavits, or the grounds of the motion, further than to state that they were based upon the •fact that both the horses and the money belonged to Tullett, and that the money was deposited by him to prevent the sheriff from taking and holding the horses, etc. Upon the hearing of the motion the district court entered judgment ■directing the money to be returned to Tullett, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

It will thus be seen that by depositing the $500 the defendant obtained, or retained, the possession, use, and control of the horses, which they alleged were very valuable, and further that the use thereof was also valuable to them on account of the horses being race horses, and by the judgment aforesaid were also given back the money. The plaintiff is thus left with nothing except the naked right to prosecute his suit to final judgment against alleged nonresident defendants who may have no property or means within this state from which a judgment, if one is obtained, can be satisfied. The principal purpose of statutes authorizing the attachment of property of nonresidents before judgment, •and the giving of so-called bail bonds, is to secure payment of any judgment the plaintiff may ultimately recover on the one hand, and, upon the other, to permit the nonresidents ito release their property from the attachment by giving the *200statutory bond, or by making a deposit of money for the-purpose of securing the judgment, if any be obtained in the action, and the defendants may thus have the full use and control of their property notwithstanding the attachment. Moreover, when such a bopd or security is given and the-property is released from the attachment, there is no longer any attachment,. and the court has thereafter no power to-entertain a motion to discharge the attachment, or to release- or discharge the bond that was given to secure the judgment, In 1 Shinn on Attachment and Garnishment, section 304,. the author, in discussing the subject, states the law thus:

“When, for the purpose of releasing attached property (or to-prevent property from being attached) a bond is given to pay the judgment which the attachment plaintiff may thereafter procure-against the attachment defendant, the principal effect of such bonds-is to dissolve the attachment (if levied) and discharge the property from the attachment lien, and the case will then proceed as if originally begun by summons. . . . The attachment has expended its force- and is no longer operative. The bond dissolves the attachment entirely. It is not given for the property itself, but for the payment absolutely of the judgment when recovered in the suit, whatever may be the amount, if within the penalty named in the bond. It is a security for any judgment which would have been satisfied out. of the attached property. ... In fact it has been said that a bond given to a plaintiff to pay the judgmént that might be recovered by him operates, not only to release the levy, but to destroy the writ itself, and that thereafter a motion to dissolve the attachment as being irregularly or improvidently issued will not be entertained. There is no levy to be quashed after the bond is given, and the property released.”

Pursuant to the doctrine contained in the foregoing, statement, the appellate courts have frequently held that where property is released from an attachment and is, upon-, giving security by the defendant, returned to him, the court before whom the action in which the writ of attachment was-issued is pending may not, upon a mere motion, enter an order or judgment discharging the attachment or releasing-the bond given as aforesaid, and in case such an order or-judgment is entered the same is clearly erroneous, if not absolutely void. In the following cases the doctrine is illustrated and applied: Wyman v. Hallock, 4 S. D. 469, 57 N. *201W. 197; McCombs v. Allen, 82 N. Y. 114; Gardner v Donnelly, 86 Cal. 367, 24 Pac. 1072; Billingsley v. Harris, 79 Wis. 103, 48 N. W. 108. See, also, 1 Wade on Attachment, section 183, and Waples on Attachment, sections 762-768, where the doctrine is discussed.

The judgment in the case at bar falls clearly within the rule stated above. When the writ of attachment issued in the case at bar was served by the sheriff, and the horses were about to be taken as the defendant’s horses from the possession of Tullett, he proposed the giving of security by making the deposit aforesaid. His proposition was accepted, and, the deposit having been made, the horses were released by the sheriff and returned to and retained by Mr. Tullett. As we have seen, all that was done by Mr. Tullett and the sheriff was clearly understood and ratified by the defendants, as appears from their answer. In view of this we cannot see what right or authority the court had to direct the money to be returned to Mr. Tullett before it was ascertained that the plaintiff was not entitled to judgment against the defendants. The money was to remain on deposit until the action was finally determined. After the deposit was made Tullet had no right to intervene in the action and claim the return of either the money or the horses. In 1 Wade on Attachment, section 183, in referring to the question now under consideration, the author says:

“The requisite bond being tendered, the court no longer has any control of the property. No third person can intervene after the release, to avail himself of the pendency of the action to have his claims to the property adjudicated, and, as a consequence, has no right to resist its release and restoration to the defendant.”

If a third person has any claim upon the property, he must proceed in the usual way. In the case at bar the horses were taken as the property of the defendant S. W. Richards, and when they were released they were returned as his. At all events, after the security was given, plaintiff was no longer concerned about the real ownership of the horses, or what became of them. After that these questions were out *202of tbe case, and all tbe plaintiff was required to do, in order to be entitled to tbe money or a part of it, was to sbow that be was entitled to a judgment against tbe defendants, and to bave sucb judgment properly entered. Tbe purpose of depositing tbe money was to secure any judgment that might be obtained, and incidentally to avoid any trouble over tbe question of tbe ownership of tbe horses. Of course, if plaintiff fails to obtain a judgment against tbe defendants, or either of them, for any reason, then tbe money must be returned.

By what we bave said we do not wish to be understood as bolding that a party may not, after giving bond, or after making a deposit, which has tbe same effect, obtain relief in case tbe bond was obtained through fraud, oppression, or actual duress. What we bold is that sucb relief may not be obtained in tbe way it was attempted to be done in this case, namely, by merely filing a motion, supported by affidavits, to bave tbe bond or money released. If sucb a bond or deposit of money is obtained through fraud, oppression, or by an abuse of process, no doubt relief may be bad in a proper proceeding to cancel tbe bond or to release tbe money, for tbe reasons aforesaid.

Respondents in their brief suggest a defect in the notice of appeal. No direct attack was made upon tbe notice, and we think it is sufficient. Tbe clause incorporated into tbe notice of appeal that tbe appeal was also taken “on all questions of fact” may be treated as surplusage. If that clause be stricken out of tbe notice, it is still complete and sufficient.

Bor tbe reasons stated in tbe foregoing opinion, tbe judgment is reversed, and tbe cause remanded to tbe district court of Davis County with directions to set aside tbe judgment ordering tbe money returned to tbe intervener, and to proceed with tbe ease in accordance with tbe views herein expressed. Appellant to recover costs on appeal.

McCARTY, C. Jand STRAUP', J., concur.

Reference

Full Case Name
LARSEN v. RICHARDS, et ux.
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published