Court Opinion

ID: 7985619
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:25:11.323141+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:11.607919
License: Public Domain

Campbell, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The objection that the bill of exceptions does not show that the plaintiff, on the trial of the issue, introduced evidence of a judgment in his favor, and therefore was not entitled to succeed on any view of the ruling excepted to, is not well taken. The bill of exceptions was not taken to a judgment overruling a motion for a new trial, in which case, on appeal, the question here is, whether, on the whole evidence, the judgment is *58right. It is a special bill of exceptions taken during the trial, and designed to present a single question, and, if it contains more of the evidence than was necessary to present that question, that does not preclude the consideration of the question it does present. The ruling excepted to is distinctly presented by this bill of exceptions, and it is manifest that such was its sole object, and we proceed to the consideration of that question. When the attachment was levied, the condition of the deed of trust was broken by default in payment of the debt it secured, but after the interposition of the claim of the trustee, and before the trial of the claimant’s issue, the debt secured by the deed of trust had been fully paid, and there was in the hands of the trustee and claimant, at the time of the trial, a large sum of money arising from the sale of the trust property which was surrendered to him on his claim and bond given, after satisfying the deed of trust, besides about three thousand bushels of corn, which he had permitted to go into the possession of the defendant in attachment and to be consumed by him. The court excluded the evidence of this state of facts, and the correctness of that action is the question for decision.
Before a sale under a deed of trust the grantor is deemed the owner of the legal title of the property conveyed, except as against the trustee after breach of the condition of the deed of trust. After breach of the condition the trustee is owner of the legal title, according to the terms of the deed, and is entitled to it as the means of executing the trust conferred upon him. The claim of the trustee in such case is paramount to that of the creditor in an attachment which is subordinate to the deed of trust. The right of the grantor in a deed of trust is vendible under execution, before or after breach of the condition, and will pass by a sale under it. .As against all but the trustee it may be seized and held after breach of condition, but the possession of the officer must yield to the superior claim of the trustee, when interposed. Butler v. Lee, 54 Miss. 476. It results that, at the time of the levy of the attachment in this ease, the trustee was entitled to the possession of the property he claimed, and that his claim was rightfully interposed.
*59But, was it admissible to inquire into the rights of the parties, as existing at the time of the trial? If so, the plaintiff in the attachment was entitled to a judgment against the trustee and claimant for so much of the property he had obtained by his claim as remained in his hands after satisfying the deed of trust. When the debt secured by the deed of trust was satisfied, the right of the trustee to the property it conveyed expired, and he was functus officio. He was no longer entitled to the property it conveyed. The claim interposed by a third person to property seized under execution or attachment, as provided for by statute, is a substitute for the action of detinue or replevin, and is subject to the same rules, except that the statute imposes the burden of proof on the plaintiff, although the claimant is an actor in the assertion of his claim. It is settled in the actions mentioned that it is admissible to inquire into the state of the title at the trial. Wells on Replevin, § 496 and cases cited; also cases cited in Whitfield v. Whitfield, 44 Miss. 254. The rule is general in all actions that the plaintiff must have the right to recover at the commencement of his suit, and at the trial.
It might occur in an action for personal property that the plaintiff was, at the commencement of the action, entitled to the property, and that before the trial it had vested in the defendant, by the expiration of the plaintiff’s title. In that case no one would1 contend that the court should award to the plaintiff the property which, in the next hour, the defendant might have seized as his under the process of the same court, to be followed by a judgment of that court that the property was his when the former trial was had. Hence the rule that where pending the suit the subject of it has ceased to be plaintiff’s and become the defendant’s, that may be shown, and the court will not commit the folly of giving a judgment for the plaintiff, to be reversed in favor of the defendant in a subsequent action for the same property. It will not award the property to one not then entitled to it. The same rule obtains in the trial of the right of property levied on, and claimed by a third person. The real inquiry in such case is, Is the property claimed liable to the process? If it was not at the time of the levy, but has become so at the trial, *60it would be a denial of justice to permit the claimant to withhold it from the creditor because he once had the right to it. The right of the attaching creditor should yield to the superior claim of the trustee in the deed of trust only so far as was necessary to pay the debt it secured. The trustee was entitled to possession of all of the property conveyed by the deed, as all of it might be required to pay the debt, but when that was paid his right ceased, and that of the creditor remained as to all property in his hands after payment of the debt. The right of the attaching creditor to the possession was only suspended by the claim of the trustee. When his right expired that of the creditor existed free from the incumbrance which before obstructed its enforcement.'
At the time of the levy the property claimed was liable to seizure under the attachment, but subject to the deed of trust. It is yet liable to the attachment, and now the incumbrance of the deed of trust has ceased to exist as a hindrance to the sale of the property remaining after its extinguishment.
At the-time of the trial tiré trustee had no right to withhold the property in his hands from the attaching creditor. He once had the right, but it had expired by a change of circumstances, and he was claiming against the creditor that to which he had no right, but which the creditor had the right to subject to his judgment. It is claimed that Butler v. Lee, 54 Miss. 476, contains a different doctrine. That is a mistaken view of that case. The only question decided in it is, that the possession of the officer, who has seized personal property under process on a judgment which is subordinate to a deed of trust, must, after the breach of the condition of the deed, yield to the paramount claim of the trustee. We reaffirm that doctrine in this opinion, but a totally different question is here presented and decided.
As the claim of the trustee was rightly interposed, he is entitled to his costs accrued before the time when he ceased to have the right to withhold the property from the plaintiff.

Reversed and remanded.