Crawford v. McMahon

69 Pa. Super. 19 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1918

Opinion by

Trexler, J.,

The Act of July 11, 1901, P. L. 663, designates the fees to be received by sheriffs in this Commonwealth, and among other things provides that the sheriff shall have “reasonable expenses of insurance, arranging goods for sale, heat, light, storage, rent, transportation, feeding live stock, and similar expenses incurred in caring and keeping goods and chattels levied upon, when the same is necessary and advantageous, or when requested by the plaintiff or defendant to incur such expense.”

*21The claimant asks that «$174 be allowed him for storage out of the funds in the hands of the sheriff. The matter came before the court on a rule on the sheriff and the claimant to show cause why the claim for storage should not be disallowed. The claimant made answer, depositions were taken, the case was heard, the claim was disallowed, and the rule made absolute. No question was raised as to the regularity of the procedure and now for the first time it is urged that the course pursued was irregular, that the sheriff in the first instance was the party upon whom the duty to make distribution fell. It is now too late to raise the question.

The real question at issue is whether the court was right in refusing to allow the claim for storage. The appellant had no contract with the sheriff, nor was any request made of the claimant by the sheriff to furnish any such accommodation. The claim rests entirely on the fact that by reason of a delay in the sale of the goods after levy was made, the goods levied upon remained on the premises, and it is argued an implied promise on the part of the sheriff to pay for the storage arose. The demand of the appellant is in the nature of a claim for use and occupation. If we refer to the act we find the expense for storage must be “incurred” by the sheriff. The sheriff is liable for the forthcoming of the property levied by him under an execution and he may make a contract for the payment of reasonable expenses for the safeguarding of the goods levied upon. He is the actor in the matter. The liability arises by reason of some act on his part. In the absence of any liability “incurred” there can be no claim against the fund. If the owner of the premises wishes to be paid for the space occupied by the goods levied upon, he must make some arrangement with the sheriff for payment of storage. The sheriff is the custodian of the property levied upon. The expenses of caring for it, until the legislature provided otherwise, fell upon him. In Hartleib v. McLane, 44 Pa. 510, the expenses of a watchman and for the removal of goods *22were held to be covered by the.taxable costs, they being supposedly sufficient for that purpose. The Act of 1901 makes the expenses therein enumerated payable out of the fund but nevertheless recognizes the fact that the sheriff in the first instance must incur the liability. The claimant has failed to show this.

It also appears that according to the appellant’s own testimony in the matter, the goods for which storage is claimed were on premises leased to one McMahon, the defendant in the execution, and were in the possession of Boyer, who held under McMahon. The appellant filed a claim for rent for the same period covered by the storage charges, and although it is said the claim for rent was withdrawn, the court might well have rejected the claim on the ground that the appellant did not have possession of the premises, and was not in the position, in any view of the case, to require payment for storage.

The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.

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