35 Vt. 273 | Vt. | 1862
No question is made upon the facts reported, but that the plaintiff’s charges for service of the writ against Low, and for his services in trying to effect a settlement of the defendant’s suit against Low, were proper, and ought to be allowed to him.
It is claimed that he improperly adjourned the sale of the piano he had advertised, and that therefore he should not be allowed for his fees on the execution.
The auditor’s report does not state, why, or for what reason, the sale was adjourned, and we can not; therefore, assume that it was wrongful, or that the defendant thereby, suffered any damage. The ordinary presumption which the law makes in favor of the acts of all men, and especially all acting in an offi-, cial character, applies.
Our statute formerly provided that a sheriff or constable should be entitled to no fees for returning an execution non est, but I am unable to find that any such provision is now contained in our statute. It may be that without such proyi sion a sheriff would not be entitled to any fees for such return, on the ground that really he had made no service of the precept, but it is not necessary to decide that point. In the present case the plaintiff had proceeded to levy the execution on property, posted it for .sale, and once adjourned the sale, when the-property was takeq away from him by another officer. We think he was as much entitled to fees on the execution, as if the defendant himself, had interfered, and countermanded the sale.
The defendant also claims that the plaintiff was not •entitled to the poundage or commission given by the statute, because he made no- sale of' the property, and that this fee must always be taken out of the avails of property sold by the officer, and is never chargeable to the creditor. But this fee is given for levying the execution, which was done in this ease. Generally of course this is followed by sale, but if, for any reason, for which the officer is not in fault, the sale is prevented, we think the officer does not lose his fees. So where property is sold on an execution, the officer generally deducts from the proceeds of the sale all his fees, and only applies the net proceeds on the execution, but if jfie creditor employs him to do
But the defendant says, that Bliss, the plaintiff’s deputy, was guilty of an official default, in not returning the writ and bond of replevin, and that he suffered loss thereby to a greater amount than the amount of the plaintiff’s account against him, and that, as the law makes the plaintiff legally answerable for all his deputy’s official defaults, this furnishes a defence to this action. The defendant’s counsel claim that this is equiva-. lent to proving that the plaintiff’s services, which form his account, were really of no value to him, and therefore do not entitle the plaintiff to receive payment.
The authorities produced by the defendant, to show that where services are so improperly and unskilfully performed as to be of no value whatever to the party receiving them, no recovery will be allowed, are unquestionable. The difficulty is, that this is a totally different case. The plaintiff’s services were all properly performed, and he was guilty of no neglect or unskilfulness that formed any ground to deprive him of payment. The plaintiff may be liable, as the defendant claims, for his deputy’s default, in an independent matter, disconnected wholly with the plaintiff’s services. The defendant’s claim, and the plaintiff’s liability, da not rest at all in contract, and an action to enforce it must be in form an action ex delicto. It probably could not have been even pleaded in offset to the plaintiff’s debt, and much less can it be set up generally as a failure of consideration. If it be all the defendant claims for it, it is a mere counter claim, soundiqg in, tort.
The judgment is affirmed,