Schultz v. Levy
Decision Date | 13 August 1898 |
Parties | SCHULTZ v. LEVY. |
Court | Oregon Supreme Court |
Appeal from circuit court, Wallowa county; Robert Eakin, Judge.
Action by J.M. Schultz against A. Levy. There was a judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Affirmed.
J.F Baker, for appellant.
C.A Smith, for respondent.
This is an action to recover possession of real property. The plaintiff settled upon and acquired title to the land in controversy under the homestead laws of the United States and received his patent therefor in July, 1891. Prior thereto, to wit, on the _____ day of September, 1889, he executed his note to the Island City Mercantile & Milling Company for the amount of a debt then due from him to the company, which note he renewed in 1892, and in November 1893, the milling company commenced an action thereon, and caused the real property in question to be attached. Judgment and an order for the sale of the attached property was rendered in such action, and the property sold to the defendant under an execution issued thereon. The sale was thereafter duly confirmed, and a sheriff's deed issued, and the defendant, by the aid of a writ of assistance, put into possession of the premises; whereupon plaintiff commenced this action, and bases his right to recover on the ground that the sale to the defendant was void because it was made under a judgment rendered for a debt contracted prior to the issuing of the patent. It is settled law in this state that land acquired by a homesteader, under section 2296 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, is not liable to the satisfaction of any debt contracted prior to the actual issuing of the patent therefor, and the fact that such debt may be evidenced by a promissory note executed after that time is of no consequence in determining the liability of the land to seizure and sale. Bank v Riley, 29 Or. 289, 45 P. 766. Counsel for the defendant does not question this rule, but he contends that the judgment and order for the sale of attached property in the action of the milling company against the plaintiff is a conclusive adjudication that the property was not exempt from seizure and sale, and is a bar to this action. But it is held in Berry v. Charlton, 10 Or. 362, that such an order is no bar to an action by the defendant in the writ to recover possession of attached property on the ground that it is exempt from execution, and this decision is...
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St. Marie v. Chester B. Brown Co., 9007
...v. Adams & French Harvester Co., 13 Neb. 97, 13 N.W. 3; Wallowa Nat. Bank v. Riley, 29 Or. 289, 45 P. 766, 54 Am.St.Rep. 794; Schultz v. Levy, 33 Or. 373, 54 P. 184; Razzano v. Burcham, 118 Wash. 142, 203 P. 23. In the instant action, no lien ever attached to the real property in question b......
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Razzano v. Burcham
...same debt, and could not be made liens upon lands patented after the original debt was contracted. This case was followed by Schultz v. Levy, 33 Or. 373, 54 P. 184. To the effect is Ash v. Eriksson, 115 Minn. 478, 132 N.W. 997. We find no authority to the contrary. The object of the statute......
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Sprinkle v. West
... ... its conclusions by a technical rule of construction.' ... This case was followed in Schultz v. Levy, 33 Or ... 373, 54 P. 184. Many cases announcing like and analogous ... principles are collated in the note to section 2296 in 6 ... ...