1 Ohio 458 | Ohio | 1824
Opinion of the court, by
Several questions are presented in this case: 1. Did the writ ■of error and supersedeas avoid and vacate the execution and levy, so as to render it a nullity, or did it merely stay the proceedings of the sheriff. 2. If the latter, did the order of the court, quashing the vend. expo, and setting aside *the appraisement, n-ffect the lev. fa. and the levy made thereon. 3. If the supersedeas merely stayed the proceedings, was the execution of November 28, 1818, and the sale made thereon, merely irregular, or altogether void, so as to entitle the plaintiff to the relief prayed for. 4. Can a scire facias be sustained in a ease like the present.
As to the first point, no authority has been cited to show the effect of a supersedeas on an execution levied on real estate. It is said in the books, that the object of a supersedeas is to stay proceedings till the errors are disposed of. In the Bishop of Ossory’s case, Cro. Jas. 534, it was resolved by all the court, that the writ of error was a supersedeas till the error was examined, affirmed, or reversed. In Badger v. Lloyd, 3 Salk. 145, it was said by Holt, Chief Justice, that although a writ of error forecloses the court, and ties up their hands, yet it doth not alter the right of the parties.
If a writ of error be allowed on the return day of a ca. sa., the sheriff may, notwithstanding, return the writ non est, the plaintiff shall have the benefit of the return, and may afterward proceed against the bail. Parkins v. Wilson, 2 Ld. Raym. 1256. This could not be the case if the allowance rendered the execution a nullity. The same inference may be drawn from the reason given for quashing the writ in the case of Smith v. Nicholson, 2 Stra. 1186. A ca. sa. had been taken out on the 3d of December, for the purpose of proceeding against bail. On the next day a writ of error was allowed, after which the ca. sa. was returned non est inventus. After the writ of error was at an end, the plaintiff proceeded by scire facias against the bail. On motion the whole proceedings were set aside, because the return of non est inventus was obtained after notice of the writ of error, which, in its nature, stops all proceedings. The sheriff could not so much as look after
The second question does not admit of a doubt. The motion was confined to the vend. expo, and the appraisement, and the order of the court extended no further. The levy was not comprehended in the motion, and can not be affected by the order. • It is the constant practice to set aside valuations of property, without disturbing the levy; and it never has been supposed that such an order rendered it necessary to sue out a new writ, or to obtain a new levy.
*The next inquiry is, whether the lev. fa. of November 25,
In 2 Tidd, 937, it is laid down that when the sheriff takes goods upon a ft. fa. to the-amount of the sum directed to be levied, the defendant is discharged, and may plead it, etc. In 1 Seld. 571, it is said there ought not to be two executions at the same timo, but if one proves ineffectual another may be sued out: In the case before us the first execution did not prove ineffectual; a levy was-made and returned, and the property had not been sold when the second execution issued.
In the case of Stoyel v. Cady, 4 Day, 222, a ca. sa. had been executed after the return day had passed.
The defendant, to procure his discharge, paid the money, and then brought an action against the sheriff and recovered, a larger sum than the judgment. The plaintiff, in the original action, paid the money, and after his death his administrators brought a scire facias to set aside the proceedings, and obtained a new execution, on the ground that the ca. sa. had become a perfect nullity before it was served ; that the judgment had been discharged by mistake, and that there had been no real satisfaction. The court sustained the writ, and the plaintiff had judgment. In that case the return day of the ca. sa. being past, it was dead in law before it. was served, and gave no authority to the officer; there had been a lapse of time; the parties were changed, and the plaintiff must have lost his debt without the relief sought for. In the case before the court there was a levy by Ridgeway, in the life of the defendant, not disposed of. After *that levy, and the death of the defendant, a new execution issued against him to Holcomb, by virtue of which there was another levy, a sale, and a return of satisfaction.
It is contended by the defendants that these proceedings are.
As to the fourth point, the defendants’ counsel urge several objections against proceeding by scire facias. They insist, from the definition of the writ given in 2 Saund. 70, that it is inapplicable to this case, but they seem to forget *tbat there is here a satisfaction of record, which forms the chief difficulty of the plaintiff, and which he seeks to set aside.
The second objection, that a scire facias to revive a judgment was unknown at common law, and was given by a statute not in force in this state, as also the third objection, that no writ of scire facias can issue against the terre tenants until the heir has been
This is the relief prayed for by the plaintiff, and we are all of opinion that he is entitled to it.
Demurrer overruled.