Sec. 52-293. Sale of attached livestock and perishable property.
Sec. 52-293. Sale of attached livestock and perishable property. When any livestock, or other personal property in its nature perishable or liable to depreciation, or the
custody and proper preservation of which would be difficult or expensive, is attached,
either party to the suit may apply to any judge of the court to which such process is
returnable for an order to sell the same, and thereupon, after such reasonable notice to
the adverse party as such judge directs, and upon satisfactory proof that such sale is
necessary and proper, and payment of the judge's fees by the party making such application, such judge may order such property to be sold by the officer who attached the
same, or, in case of such officer's inability, by a state marshal, or any indifferent person
requested in writing to do so by such attaching officer, at public auction, at such time
and place, and upon such notice, as such judge deems reasonable; and such judge may,
at such judge's discretion, order the officer making such sale to deposit the avails with
the clerk of such court.
(1949 Rev., S. 8036; March, 1958, P.A. 27, S. 69; 1959, P.A. 28, S. 122; 152, S. 76; P.A. 00-99, S. 112, 154; P.A. 01-195, S. 60, 181.)
History: 1959 acts deleted enumeration of courts, etc. to which parties may apply, including town, city and borough
courts and county commissioners, which were abolished, substituted statement application be made to court to which
process is returnable, and deleted provision that order for deposit be subject to order of court having final jurisdiction of
cause; P.A. 00-99 replaced reference to sheriff of the county or any deputy with state marshal, effective December 1, 2000;
P.A. 01-195 made technical changes for purposes of gender neutrality, effective July 11, 2001.
"Perishable" and "expensive" defined. 31 C. 495. Cited. 47 C. 577. Cited. 99 C. 591.