53 Iowa 122 | Iowa | 1880
The appellant maintains that there is no law by which a constable who has seized property upon execution can in case of sickness and disability relieve himself of it by turning it over to another constable. The argument is that if the law should allow the constable who has made the levy to thus relieve himself, it would follow that it would be the duty of the constable to whom the property should be tendered to receive it. But it is said that this would be unjust to the constable receiving the proj)erty, because he would have no means of indemnity.
It appears to us that if the original officer was entitled to indemnity, the receiving officer might properly demand indemnity, and if indemnified that he could' not properly refuse to receive the property and execute the writ. At any rate a constable who becomes incapable of-discharging his duties by reason of sickness must be allowed to relieve himself in some way of responsibility. It is held, it is true, in Fredenstein v. McNier, 81 Ill., 208, that a sheriff cannot be relieved of responsibility by reason ox sickness;'but this is because he
The defendant demanded and' received an indemnifying bond. The statute provides that where the officer' who has seized property is indemnified, he shall proceed to subject it to the execution. Code, § 3056. The question is whether his duty in this respect is so far imperative that lie cannot escape liability for failure if the property did not belong to the execution defendant, and such fact is averred and shown. In Lumnis v. Kasson, 43 Barb., 373, it was held that the effect of indemnifying the officer was merely to impose upon him the responsibility of proving the 'property out of the execution defendant. Several cases are cited in support of the-decision. But that case turned largely upon the construction of statutes, and is not strictly applicable to the case at bar. In Wadsworth v. Walliker, 45 Iowa, 395, it was held that where a sheriff had seized property upon a writ of attachment and had been indemnified for the seizure, and afterward released the property, he might escape liability by showing the property out of the debtor. This case would seem to be decisive of the question before us if no distinction should be made between the case of a seizure of property under a writ of attachment, and the case of a seizure of property under an execution. That a, distinction should be made is intimated
, In giving the instruction in. question we think that the court erred.
Eeversed.