The affidavit required by this section to be made by a claimant, as the basis for interposing his claim, although made within five days after the seizure of the property, was not on that account void as an initial step in the proceeding for the claim suit. If the claimant, having made such affidavit within five days after the seizure, had, at the expiration of five days thereafter, executed the claim bond and received the possession thereunder, of the property lévied on — the defendant having neglected in that time to replevy the property — it could not be seriously questioned that the claim would have been properly interposed. We need not decide, whether the claim bond having been executed by claimant, before the expiration of five days after the levy and seizure, was so irregular as to render it of no effect for the purposes for which it was made. However that may be, the bond and the affidavit of claim were stricken from the file on motion of the plaintiff, and at the term of the court at which the claim suit was properly triable ; and, thereupon, by leave of the court, the claimant filed another affidavit and executed another claim bond. This latter affidavit and bond, the plaintiff moved, also, to strike from the file, 'on -grounds- substantially, that they were made after the expiration of the five days referred to in the statute ; that claimant had been in possession of the property since the execution of the original claim bond ; that the sheriff was not in possession of the property,. and that the former affidavit and claim bond had been stricken from the file. This additional affidavit and bond were made, as we have stated, and were allowed to be filed before the parties entered on the trial of the claim suit, and while the proceedings were in fieri. In Martin v. Mayor Bros., 112 Ala. 620, a case of the statutory trial of the right of property, a third party filed an affidavit and executed a replevy instead of a claim bond. The bond was allowed to be amended so as to make it a claim bond. The court said:, “When
As to the objection that the claimant and not the sheriff was in possession of the property when the last claim bond was executed and approved by him, it seems to be fully met by the decision of this court. in a case similar in many respects to the one last cited. In the case referred to the claimants executed a replevy bond and received the property, and on a subsequent day, they sought to withdraw and destroy the repley bond, which request was refused by the .sheriff. Thereupon, without a redelivery of the property to the sheriff, they executed a claim bond which was approved and accepted by the sheriff, who returned both bonds to the court. At-the return term, the plaintiff's in the claim suit moved the court to strike the claim affidavit and bond from the file, on the ground that they .were improperly received, after the goods had been replevied, obtained axid held by the claimants themselves, under the replevy bond. The court held that there was no error in overruling the motion to strike the claim proceedings from the file, stating, in language applicable and appropriate to the casein hand, “True, there was ho formal surrender of possession of the goods to the sheriff, but the sheriff is not shown to have made any point on that. He accepted the affidavit of claim, and approved the claim bond offered. This estopped the claimants from denying that they acquired the possession and held 'it under the claim bond. If the sheriff, had been placed in possession of the property, he would have retained it only long enough to- approve the bond, when it would have passed instantly back to the claimants. If the posses
Under the circumstances shown, in the case in hand, there was no error in the action of the court allowing the additional or amended affidavit and claim bond. The claimant is estopped from denying that he acquired possession and held under this bond, and it subserves the plaintiff’s purposes as well as if it had been executed on the day he. would have preferred for it to have been executed.
The court did not err in giving the general charge for claimant.
'■-Affirmed.