Aultman, Miller & Co. v. McGrady

58 Iowa 118 | Iowa | 1882

Adams, J.

1. EXECUTUION: satisfaction of: return. A return upon execution is evidence only of what can properly be embraced in a return. A .return show-™g that the judgment has been satisfied by the judgment defendant is not evidence of such fact, Abercrombie v. Chandler, 9 Ala., 625. A return upon execution should be a statement of what is done by the officer in obedience to the writ. The provision of statute in relation thereto is in these words: “ The officer to whom an execution is legally issued shall indorse thereon the day and hour when he received it, and the levy, sale, or other act done by virtue thereof, with the date, and the dates and amounts of any receipts or payments in satisfaction thereof.” Code, § 3038. There is no provision for a return showing the acts of any one but the officer. A statement in the return purporting to show the acts of some one other than the officer is without authority of law and surplusage. Gilchrist v. Bank, 11 Ala., 408, and McKeag v. Callehan, 13 Ala., 828. We ought perhaps to say that if a return is of doubtful meaning, courts are inclined to so construe it that it will show that the officer did his duty. Whittlesby v. Starr, 8 Conn., 134. So it has been said that the single word “satisfied,” indorsed upon the execution and signed by the officer, should be construed as meaning that the officer has made the entire *120amount of the execution. Herman on Executions, 379. The word “ satisfied ” is embraced in the return in question, but the whole return taken together clearly precludes the idea that the officer had made any part of the execution. Indeed, it is not claimed by defendant that the return, taken as a whole, showed that the execution was satisfied. Their claim is that the return showed that the judgments were satisfied. The debt, of course, was not satisfied. The fact that security was taken showed that. But the defendant mortgagee says that the return shows that the security was taken for “ the moneys,” which should be considered as indicating that the parties understood that the plaintiff’s claim was no longer evidenced by'the judgments.

We do not care to go into an examination of the language of the return, for the purpose of determining what it shows in regard to the agreement or understanding of the parties. If it showed anything in that respect, it showed something not provided for by law, and the defendant mortgagee was not justified in relying upon it.

We do not say that where an execution is returned unsatisfied by order of the plaintiff, it would be improper for the officer' to state the fact of the order in his return. Now, while in such a case a question might arise in regard to the truth of the statement, it would be a question solely between the plaintiff and the officer. It would not be a question pertaining to the validity of the judgment, or effect of the officer’s acts, which might concern third parties.

Having reached the conclusion that the defendant mortgagee was not justified in relying upon the return, as showing that the judgments were satisfied, we have to say that we think it was not justified in relying upon the clerk’s entry. That referred to the return, and showed in effect no more than the return showed.

In our opinion the mortgage is subject to the lien of the judgments.

Reversed.

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