
    GERMAN LOOKING GLASS PLATE CO. et al. v. THE ASHEVILLE FURNITURE AND LUMBER CO.; FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SPRINGFIELD, OHIO; THE MAD RIVER NATIONAL BANK, OHIO, et al.
    
    (Decided June 7, 1900.)
    
      Creditor's Bill — Injimction—-Receiver—Attachment—For-eign Judgment — Irregularity.
    1. The Ohio banks, creditors of the Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company, recovered judgments upon their claims in the Court of Common Pleas of Clark County, Ohio, and afterwards brought suit in the Superior Court of Buncombe County, N. C., upon their judgments, together with attachments levied upon the property of their debtor and recovered judgments in the Superior Court upon their Ohio judgments, and also in the attachments: Held, that the North Carolina judgments were valid, and unaffected by any alleged irregularity in the Ohio judgments which were used in evidence, and that the attachment liens related back to the levy.
    2. The fact that the plaintiffs were also creditors of the Asheville Furniture and Lumber Co., did not entitle them to an order for injunction and receiver against the Ohio banks, who by their diligenpe had established their claims and seized the' property of their debtor.
    CReditoAs Brrm pending in BuNcombe Superior Court, heard before Siarbuclc, J., at Chambers, June 29, 1899, upon an application to continue until final hearing an injunction order previously granted, and for the appointment of a receiver of the property of the defendant Ashev-ille Furniture and Lumber Co. The Ohio banks, defendants, were also creditors of the Furniture and Lumber Co., had reduced their claims to judgments in the Court of Common Pleas of Clark County, Ohio, and afterwards sued upon them in Buncombe Superior Court, and attached the property of their debtor, and recovered judgments in both the suits and attachments, using the Ohio judgments as .evidence.
    The application for injunctive relief set up in. the creditor’s bill, was that the Ohio judgments were irregularly obtained. His Honor ordered the injunction, and appointed a receiver. The Ohio banks, defendants, excepted, and appealed.
    Branches of this Furniture and Lumber Co. case, have been heretofore before the Supreme Court, and reported: 116 N. 0., 827; 120 N. C., 475; 122 N. O., 752.
    
      Messrs. Ohas. A. Moore, and F. A. Sondley, for appellants.
    
      Messrs. T. H. Gobi, and W. W. Jones, for appellees.
   Furches, J.

After examining a record of over three hundred pages of printed matter we hope we sufficiently understand the facts of this case to decide the questions of law presented by the appeal.

It seems that plaintiffs and the defendants, The Eirst National Bank of Springfield, Ohio, and The Mad Eiver National Bank, were creditors of The Asheville Furniture ■and Lumber Company. The plaintiff and the defendants, The First National Bank of Springfield, and the Mad Eiver National Bank, all brought suits in the Superior Court of Buncombe County upon their respective claims.

The Ohio banks commenced their action on tire 24th of November, 1891, on which day they sued out attachments, which were levied on property of The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company, and at December term of said court The First National Bank of Springfield, Ohio, recovered judgment against The-Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company for $20,726.40, and the Mad Eiver National Bank recovered judgment against The- Asheville Furniture and Lumber Co., for $1,053.60. And afterwards, these two actions, by consent of all parties, were consolidated, and at August Term, 1895, of said court, tírese parties, in this consolidated action, re-covered judgment upon their attachment proceedings, condemning the property so attached and against The Battery Park Bank, The Western Carolina Bank and The National Bank of Asheville, into whose hands the attached property had gone, and who had intervened in the attachment proceedings, for the sum of $11,000, as the value of the property attached, and $2,488 as damages for the detention, etc., of said attached property. That at March Term, 1892, of said court, The East Tennessee National Bank recovered a judgment against The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company for $5,104.12, upon which it seems an- attachment was levied on property of The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company in Swain County. That on the 15th of August, 1895, the German Glass Plate Company and the Atlanta Paper Company commenced this action as a creditor’s bill. In this action plaintiffs asked for an injunction against the Ohio banks enjoining them from receiving the money recovered on their attachments, and against The Battery Park Bank, The Western Carolina Bank and the National Bank of Asheville from paying said money to the Ohio banks. And on the 15th of September, 1898, the injunction was granted, and a receiver appointed, from which order the Ohio banks appealed.

The Ohio banks held notes against The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company, a North Carolina corporation, a part of whose directors lived in Ohio, where it seems to have had an office and place of business, and where some of the endorsers on said notes resided; and it seems that these Ohio banks had sued on these notes in the State of Ohio, and had recovered judgments there against The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company, as well as against the endorsers. That they had sent transcripts of these judgments here, which were used as evidence in the action of the Ohio banks in their actions and attachments in Buncombe Superior Court, in which they recovered their judgments against The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company, and the intervening defendants therein.

There is no suggestion but what the notes given to the Ohio banks were' genuine, and that The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company owed these banks the debts for which said notes were given. But it is contended by The German Looking Glass Plate Company, and the other plaintiffs in this action that there was an' irregularity in the proceedings in Ohio by which the Ohio banks procured said judgments in the Ohio court; and the greater part of the arguments in this Court were directed to a discussion of that question. It may be that there was such irregularity as that contended for, but we do not say that there was, as it does not become necessary for us to pass upon that question, as we do not think it material to the determination of the case on appeal.

The rights of the Ohio banks do not depend upon the regularity by which the Ohio judgments were obtained, but upon the judgments which these banks recovered against The Ashe-ville Furniture and Lumber Company in the Superior Court of Buncombe County, and the judgment of said banks (in the consolidated action) recovered against the intervenors, in the attachment proceedings. These are regular, are still in force and unsatisfied. The Ohio banks would have had a right of action against The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company, on their debts, and upon their notes; and the Ohio judgments were only used as evidences of indebtedness in the actions of the Ohio banks against The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company in the action in the Superior Court of Buncombe. And the fact that evidence may have been offered on the trial of that action that would have been excluded (if such was the case) can not make said judgments irregular and void. Indeed, we do not understand that this is contended by the plaintiffs in this action. It was said that some of the parties interested in the Ohio debts — judgments— were stockholders and directors in the corporation, The Ashe-ville Furniture and Lumber Company; but if this were true it did’ not prevent them from dealing with the Asheville company, nor did it prevent the Ohioi banks, in which they were interested, from dealing with The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company. Langston v. Improvement Co., 120 N. C., 132.

Then the judgments of the Ohio, banks being’ regular North Carolina judgments still in force and unsatisfied, and the attachments sued out by these banks being regular (based upon an allegation of fraud), and levied on the property from which the judgment against the interveners Was rendered, the question depends upon the rights the Ohio banks acquired by reason of said attachments — the attachment liens.

The fact that The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company owed the plaintiffs, gave them no lien on its property; and although the plaintiffs have commenced what they claim to be a creditor’s bill, and appeal to the equitable jurisdiction of the court, can not avail them anything as against the Ohio banks, if these banks have acquired a legal right — a priority to this fund, over the other creditors of The Asheville Furniture and Lumber Company. So if the attachments gave the Ohio banks the legal right to this fund. — a special lien — a judicial appropriation. — they are still entitled to have it. Equity always recognizes the legal rights of parties, and never displaces them. This is thei question — the crucial point in this case — and it seems to be settled against the plaintiffs, The German Looking Glass Plate Company, and the other plaintiffs in this action. By the levy of the attach-inents, the Ohio banks acquired a lien on the property from which this fund was derived, which lien commenced at the date of their levy on the 24th of November, 1891. McMillen v. Parsons, 52 N. C., 163; 3 Am. and Eng. Enc. of Law (2d Ed.), 220.

There was error in the judgment appealed from in granting the injunction, and it is reversed. But if it be deemed necessary to have a receiver as to other property and effects not embraced in the judgment of the Ohio banks upon the attachments, that part of the order appealed from may be allowed to stand. The defendant, the Ohio bank, will recover the costs of this appeal, including the cost of printing the whole record.

Error. Beversed.  