16 N.J.L. 305 | N.J. | 1838
At this term, the opinion of the Court, was delivered by
Money, whether in specie or in bank notes, (which are treated, civiliter, as money,) if in the possession of the defendant, or capable of being identified as his property, may be taken in execution, or under an attachment. It was so held by the Supreme Court of New York, in Handy v. Dobbin, 12 Johns, R. 220; and by the Supreme Court of the United States, in Turner v. Fendall, 1 Cranch, 117. Butin this latter case, the Court decided that if a sheriff has money in his hands, raised by him on execution, in favor of one man, he cannot take that money on an execution in favor of another person, against that man; for the money so raised by him, does not become the goods and chattels of the one for whom it was raised, until it has been paid over to him — and that by the command of the writ, the sheriff is in strickness, bound to bring the money into Court, there to be paid to the plaintiff, or be disposed of, as the Court shall direct.
In Ross v. Clarke, 1 Dall. R. 354, the ease was; that Ross had paid money into Court for Clarke, in a suit between them on scire facias in which Ross was defendant. Ross then sued out an attachment against Clarke, and laid it on the money in the hands of the Prothonotary; but the Court set aside the attachment, saying that the money was to be considered the same, as if it had been paid into the hands of the sheriff. Mr. Sergeant in his Treatise on Foreign Attachments, (fol. 74.) states it as a rule, that money levied in execution by the sheriff, upon a fieri facias, and in his hands, cannot be attached — and so it is laid down in 1. Comyn’s Dig. tit. attachment, letter D. which cites 1 Leon. 30, 264.
Notwithstanding these authorities, it may be insisted, that as our statute directs that the writ of attachment shall be executed»
So far therefore, as respects the seizure of the three hundred and sixty dollars, in the hands of the sheriff, as the money, of the defendant in attachment, the seizure was wrong, and the sheriff did right in not delivering over the money to the auditors:— Nevertheless, the attachment was well served on the rights and credits of the defendant in attachment, in the hands of the sheriff; and he having received this money, for the defendant in attachment, it was a right and credit in his hands to that amount. What then ought the sheriff to do under such circumstances ? His course is a plain one. He should obey the command of the writ of execution under which he raised the money. He should bring the money into Court, and give notice to the plaintiff in attachment, or to the auditors, that he has done so. The Court then can control the application of the funds, and protect their officer in the discharge of his duty. If after paying the money into Court, a sheriff should be sued by scire facias, as a garnishee, he may protect himself by shewing, that he has obeyed the process, under which he raised the money. I am therefore of opinion, that the scire facias in this case, ought to be dismissed, and that the sheriff bring the money into Court, to be paid over by the clerk, to the auditors in attachment, if no person interposes a claim to it, paramount to the title of the plaintiffs in execution. And as this case has been amicably submitted to the Court for its advisory opinion, let the scire facias be dismissed without costs on either side.
Scire facias dismissed without costs.
Cited in Lomerson v. Huffman, 1 Dutcher 632.