55 Barb. 620 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1864
The action was brought to recover the value of a pipe of gin, which the plaintiff had levied upon, and which was subsequently taken by the defendants upon an attachment, and oh the removal of which, by the defendants, the cask burst and the gin was lost.
It appeared that on the 19th of March, 1863, the plain
When the testimony was closed, the defendants’ counsel moved for a nonsuit, which motion the judge denied; to which the defendants’ counsel excepted.
- The defendants asked the court to charge the jury, that if they believed from the testimony that the levy was made or held for the purpose of covering the property, and allowing the owner to dispose of it for his-own benefit, then it was not good, as against the attachment. The court refused so to charge, and the defendants excepted.
The defendants requested the court to charge that if the • sheriff levied upon'the property in such a manner and left it in the possession of "the defendant in the execution, or his agent, to dispose of in such a manner, as riot to apprise others of the levy; and so that the same might be disposed of and squandered, and the defendants, without notice of the levy,- attached this property, the plaintiff could not recover, and the defendants, under the attachment, would be justified in removing the property. The court refused so to charge; to which the defendants excepted.
The defendants requested the court to charge that if the sheriff levied upon property enough to satisfy the execution and the attachment, and the plaintiff suffered it to be squandered by Campbell, so that he could not satisfy the execution out of the property, he could not recover. The court refused so to charge; to which the defendants excepted.
The court decided that no question should be submitted to the jury, except the question of how much there was due upon the execution. To which decision and refusal the defendants excepted.
The court further ordered the jury to bring in a verdict against the defendants Berry and Estes for the amount due on said execution; to which order and • decision the defendants excepted.
The jury found a verdict against the defendants Berry
It is true that the defendant Berry had a right to levy his attachment upon the property in question; but he had no right to remove it, for it was already in the custody of the sheriff and of the law; and if the sheriff suffered it afterwards to be squandered or misapplied, he was responsible for such neglect, as w;ell to the plaintiff in the attachment suit as to the plaintiff in the execution, and the charge, to the proposition alluded to, was therefore correct.
Each of the other rulings and decisions of the court which were excepted to, were also correct. There were no facts to submit to the jury upon which they could legitimately find as desired by the defendants’ counsel. Hothing to prove collusion between the sheriff, even, and the defendant in the execution, or from which the jury could infer it; nothing even to show that the sheriff or Osterhout were ever aware that Campbell owed any other debts than the one included in the execution; no order for delay from the plaintiff in the execution, or any interference on his part with the duties of the sheriff The execution was not stale. It had not run half of the sixty days, when the defendants took the property. And there was not only no authority cited on the argument to sustain the propositions of the defendants, but I am not able to find' any such; while the law is well settled that the plaintiff in an execution cannot lose his lien acquired by a levy upon the property of his execution debtor, without some fault on his part.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Morgan, Baton and Foster, Justices.]