60 So. 737 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
A. O. Campbell brought an action -of detinue against Lee Byers for the recovery of two mules. The plaintiff in the detinue suit made the affidavit and bond authorized by section 3778 of the Code of 1907. The bond was properly approved, and authority to the sheriff to take the property into his possession was duly indorsed on the summons, as provided in said section of the Code. Under the power thus conferred upon him, the sheriff took possession of the property, and the defendant in the detinue suit, said Lee Byers, within the five days provided for in section 3780, «executed and delivered to the sheriff the bond provided
The sheriff failed, under tlié provisions of section 3783 of the Code of 1907, Avhich Ave hereafter set out in full in this opinion, to make return upon the above bond of the fact that Byers had failed, for 30 days after the judgment, to deliver the animal or to pay the costs. Thereupon the plaintiff in said judgment in detinue filed an application to the court in Avhich said judgment Avas rendered, praying that the sheriff be required to make said return upon the said bond. The court made the older, and the sheriff thereupon made the return. The ap'pellees were not parties to this last-named proceeding, and had nothing to do with it. If they knevv anything of i‘t the record fails to disclose it. After the .shériff
We are aware of the rule laid down by Chief Justice Stone in the case of Gravett v. Malone, 54 Ala. 19, in which he says: “That which forms the grounds of relief on supersedeas must either rest on facts subsequent to the decree, such as satisfaction, or, if it relates to antecedent facts, must show fraud in the decree or want of jurisdiction in the court apparent on the face of the record or a denial of the relation which authorizes execution.” While the facts in this case plainly negative any idea of any intentional fraud on the part of the sheriff, and, in fact, show affirmatively that he acted in perfect good faith, nevertheless, as all the facts show that when Byers went with the deputy sheriff to take possession of the animal the animal was then in a dying-condition and actually died in that lot without fault of Byers, and that, for that reason, Byers Avas never able to get that possession of the animal which is contemplated by the above-quoted statute, we think that, in failing- to indorse the real facts upon the bond, a fraud in law was unintentionally, but actually, practiced upon appellees. At any rate, the court under the evidence in this case, was authorized to find that as Byers, after
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Note. — The foregoing opinion was prepared by Judge de Graffenried, while he was a judge of this court, and is adopted by the court.