Citation Numbers: 5 Abb. Pr. 39, 3 Keyes 398, 2 Trans. App. 116
Judges: Hunt
Filed Date: 3/15/1867
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
—Numerous exceptions were taken during the trial. Some of them are conceded by the appellants to be without merit.
I have examined them all with care, but do not think it necessary to discuss any of them, other than the exceptions taken to the charge of the judge. Weiner was a merchant in Lickport, and the owner of the goods in question. In November, 1857, he made an assignment t© one Baer. The assignment was alleged to be fraudulent. Testimony was given upon this question, and the jury by their verdict decided that it was fraudulent. On the 23rd of January, 1858, the deputy sheriff made the levy under which the goods were afterwards removed and sold. It is in relation to the validity of this levy that the question is made. On the 26th day of January, Baer made a sale to the plaintiffs of all the goods remaining unsold, which
In substance, the sheriff, with the executions in his possession, went to the person having charge of the property, or who, with others, was in its apparent possession, and in view and control of the goods, informed such person that he levied on the goods, and indorsed a memorandum of such levy upon the executions. No notice of the levy was given to Baer, the assignee. It was sufficient to give it to the person in charge. The jury have found that, as to creditors, the title was in Weiner, and not in Baer. No notice to Baer could have been necessary.
The plaintiffs’ counsel requested the court to charge the jury that there was no evidence of a sufficient levy upon the goods to entitle the defendant to hold the goods. The court declined so to charge, and the plaintiffs excepted. The court charged the jury that it was not necessary for an officer to take manual possession of the goods, or to assume the entire control over property, to constitute a valid levy; that if the sheriff went into the store where the goods in question were, having in possession the executions, for the purpose of levying on the goods, and found Weiner in the store, apparently in possession, exhibited the executions to Weiner, informed him that he levied upon the goods, and he then levied and made a minute upon his executions, this constituted a sufficient
It appeared from the assignment of Weiner that a preference was given therein to one George Judson, to the amount of sixty dollars, for rent. On this branch of the case the court charged the jury that if Weiner preferred Judson for this sum for the occupation of the dwelling-house used by him, before and subsequent to the assignment, even though a bona fide liability, with intent that the same should accrue to Weiner’s future benefit, by securing to himself and family the future use of said dwelling-house, without paying rent or being liable therefor, the assignment was void. To this charge the plaintiff excepted. The law of this proposition is clearly sound (2 Comst., 365 ; 4 Id., 211; 5 Id., 547). The evidence from
These questions are the only ones requiring particular notice.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.