Case ID: mass_47/html/0299-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Dewey, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Edward Kilborn vs. Joseph Lyman.
    An assignment of a debtor’s property, under the insolvent act, [SI. 1838, c. 163,) does not dissolve an attachment thereof, which was made before the passing of the act.
    This action, which was trespass upon the case against the sheriff of Hampshire, was submitted to the decision of the court upon the following facts agreed :
    The plaintiff, on the 28th of November 1837, sued out'a writ of attachment in an action against Luther Clapp, returnable to the court of common pleas in this county, at the February term 1838, and delivered the same to William H. Mosely, a deputy of the defendant, with directions to attach the property of said Clapp. On the 9th of December 1837, said Mosely returned on said writ, that he had attached all the personal property of said Clapp, consisting of household furniture and merchandize, sufficient to satisfy the demand set forth in said writ, and had given him a summons for his appearance at said court. The plaintiff’s said action was entered at said court, and was afterwards carried to the supreme judicial court, in which, at the September term 1841, the plaintiff recovered judgment against said Clapp for $ 858-97, damages, and $74-84, costs of suit. Execution issued on said judgment, on the 1st of October following, and on the next day the plaintiff offered said execution to the defendant, and requested him to take and collect it; informing him that his deputy, the said Mosely, had attached property on the original writ, and showing him a copy of said Mosely’s return on said writ. The defendant, for reasons hereinafter stated, refused to receive or collect said execution. The plaintiff, on the same day, (being within 30 days after rendition of said judgment,) delivered said execution to A. Wright, then one of the defendant’s deputies, and in formed him that said Mosely had attached property sufficient to secure the judgment, showed him a copy of said Mosely’s return and directed said Wright to secure and collect the amount oi said execution. But said Wright, for the reasons hereinafter stated, instead of seizing the property which was attached on the original writ, returned on said execution, on the 21st of October 1841, that he had made diligent search for the goods and chattels of said Clapp, and for the household furniture and merchandize of said Clapp, and could find none; and that, being directed by the plaintiff not to commit said Clapp on said execution, he therefore returned the same wholly unsatisfied.
    Before the rendition of the abovementioned judgment, said Clapp had petitioned for the benefit of the insolvent act of 1838, and his property had been assigned, as is by said ac< directed, and he had received his discharge under the same,
    When said execution was offered to the defendant for service, he said he would take it and arrest the body of Clapp, but would not take the property attached, because the attachment had been dissolved by the process under the insolvent act. The plaintiff refused to authorize the defendant to arrest the body of Clapp, and the defendant refused to take the execution.
    At the time of the attachment on the original writ, the said Mosely, without any direction from the plaintiff, delivered the attached property to two persons of apparent responsibility, and took their receipt therefor. The property was then delivered to the debtor, and was by him consumed and disposed of, before judgment was rendered in said action; and before said judgment was rendered, the persons who gave their receipt to Mosely, as aforesaid, had become insolvent. When the execution was delivered to said Wright, he procured said receipt, and made a formal demand on the persons who signed it, for the attached property. They declined to do any thing in relation to the same, and he therefore made return on the execution, as above stated. There was, at that time, no visible property of said Clapp, which could have been seized on the execution.
    
      Briggs &f Lanckton, for the plaintiff.
    The 25th section of St. 1838, c. 163, saved all rights which had accrued to any person by virtue of preexisting provisions of law. The attachment, in the present case, was made before the passing of that statute, and a right had accrued to the plaintiff, which was saved by that section. So Putnam, J. says, in Bigelow v. Pritchard, 21 Pick. 175. In Smith v. Bradstreet, 16 Pick. 265, 266, Shaw, C. J. says an attachment of real estate constitutes a lien, a real interest in the land, which may be followed up to a perfect title. In Norton v. Babcock, 2 Met. 510, an attachment was held to be an incumbrance on land, within the meaning of a covenant against incumbrances. And Clapp could not have sold the property which was attached by Mosely, except as subject to the attachment. There are numerous cases m which this court has declared that an attachment is a lien; and a lien, by its very definition, is a “right” of detaining the property of another, till some demand be satisfied.
    In Grant v. Lyman, 4 Met. 470, the attachment was made after the passing of St. 1838, c. 163, and was dissolved by vir tue of the provision in § 5 ; there being no saving, in <§ 25, of such an attachment.
    
      
      Wells, for the defendant.
    The 5th section of St. 1838, c. 163, in express terms, declares that an assignment of a debtor’s property, though it may be attached, shall dissolve the attachment. By the Rev. Sts. c. 2, § 6, words in a statute are to be construed and understood according to the common and approved usage of the language; but technical words, and words that have acquired a peculiar meaning in the law, are to be construed and understood according to such peculiar meaning. Is an attachment a “right,” under <§> 25 of St. 1838, c. 163, or is it a remedy 7 In Grant v. Wyman, 4 Met. 475, an attachment was said by the court to “belong to the matter of remedy,” which was regulated by the lex loci. That case seems to be decisive of the present.
   The opinion of the court was given at May term 1844.

Dewey, J.

The case of Grant v. Lyman, 4 Met. 470, differs from the present in the material fact, that there the action was founded upon a supposed neglect of the deputy sheriff, in not keeping, and seizing on execution, goods and chattels that had been attached upon a process issued subsequent to the St. of 1838, c. 163; while, in the present case, the attachment was made before the passage of that act. The language of the 5th section of the act is very broad in its provisions as to the vesting of all the property of the debtor in his assignee; and it is directly provided that such shall be its effect, “ although the same may then be attached on mesne process as the property of said debtor; and such assignment shall be effectual to pass all the said estate, and dissolve any such attachment.” This provision would clearly dissolve any existing attachment of the property of the insolvent debtor, unless it can be shown that the particular case is, for special reasons, to be taken out of the operation of this section. It was attempted to do so in Grant v. Lyman, by showing that in fact no effectual attachment was made, inasmuch as the officer left the property in the possession of the debtor, taking an accountable receipt of a third person therefor; and that the property, so returned as attached, was either consumed or disposed of by the debtor anterior to the proceedings in insolvency, so that no portion of the same passed to the assignee. In this respect, the case of Grant v. Lyman is like the case at bar, and, to that extent, is an authority bearing upon the present case. And we should hold now, as we did in that case, that if the attachment was dissolved, whatever might be the form and manner of making it, all the consequences of such dissolution must follow; and this would have discharged the defendant from all liability.

But the plaintiff insists, that there was no such dissolution of the attachment in the present case. To sustain this position, he relies upon $ 25 of St. 1838, c. 163, which section is as follows : “ All the provisions of law inconsistent with the provisions of this act are hereby repealed; saving all rights which have accrued to any person by virtue of the same, which shall be judged and decided upon in the same manner as if this act had not been passed.”

What is the effect of this provision, and to what rights has it reference ? The language used is general, and the cases embraced within the scope of its provisions are those in which rights had accrued to parties before the passing of the act. But are attachments on mesne process rights in the attaching creditors, within the purposes of this saving clause ?

This subject was alluded to in the case of Bigelow v. Pritchard, 21 Pick. 169, in which it was said by Putnam, J., that rights acquired under attachments made prior to the time when the St. of 1838, c. 163, took effect, would have been protected by §25 of that act. If this question had been necessarily raised in that case, this opinion would be directly in point, and furnish a strong authority for the decision of this case. But the attachment in that case was made after the law took effect, upon a cause of action that accrued before, and the party claiming under the attachment contended that the right of making a valid attachment was, as respects all contracts made before the passage of the act, a vested right, which could not be constitutionally taken away by an act of the legislature; and this was the real question decided in the case. The further suggestions which have been cited, are therefore not to be taken as an authoritative decision. The present case necessarily brings us to the question, whether an attachment of property creates a right in the party making the attachment, within the provisions of $ 25, already cited. The plaintiff’s attachment was made, it will be recollected, before the passing of St. 1838, c. 163; and if such attachment is embraced in the saving clause in <§> 25, then, of course, it was not dissolved by the general provisions of the act, which affect attachments, and declare that the assignment of the property of an insolvent debtor under that act shall dissolve any attachment of the same.

In the general language in which we speak of rights and remedies, an attachment would doubtless be classed with the latter. It is one of those statute privileges conferred upon creditors, which exist at the will of the legislature, as a part of our system of jurisprudence, and which might be wholly abrogated without any violation of the constitutional provision prohibiting the passage of laws “ impairing the obligation of contracts.” The question, in the light in which we view it, as presented in the present case, is not so much a question of power in the legislature to dissolve existing attachments, as of the real purpose and design of the provision in $ 25 of the insolvent act*. Was it not intended, by this saving clause in that section, to protect all interests acquired by attachments already made ? Were they not rights, within the fair and reasonable meaning of that section ? This question leads to the further inquiry as to the nature of the lien acquired by an attachment, and whether it creates any real interest in the property attached. This subject has been much discussed in reference to the saving clause in the United States bankrupt law of 1841. It has also been considered by this court, in the case of the Receivers of the Phœnix Bank v. Hamilton Bank, praying for an injunction and dissolution of an attachment; a case decided in Suffolk, (March term 1844,) and to which I refer for a more full presentation of our views upon this point. We are satisfied, from an examination of the various statutes of this Commonwealth, and the judicial decisions' applicable to the subject, that from a very early period, and down to the present time, attachments have been considered and treated as liens, having attached to them, of course, their peculiar character of conditional liens and liable to be defeated by various contingencies which may prevent any recovery of judgment or levy of execution. We are of opinion that an existing attachment made before the passage of St. 1838, c. 163, is within the saving clause of § 25, and therefore that the proceedings in insolvency did not cause a dissolution of the attachment, in the present case. Such being the case, the ia-bility of the defendant for the neglect of duty on the part oí his deputy, is well established, and judgment must be rendered for the plaintiff.