Hill v. President of Bank of Alabama

5 Port. 537 | Ala. | 1837

ORMOND, J.

This was a motion by the defendants in error, against the plaintiff in error, for failing to return an execution. The notice, after describing the judgment and execution, and that it *542came to the hands of the sheriff, in time to be returned, concludes thus:

“Now therefore, you the said J. M. Hill, and you, John Jenkins and Thomas Armstrong, sureties of said sheriff, are hereby notified, that the said President and Directors of the Bank of the State of Alabama, will by attorney, on the first day of the County Court, to be holden on the third Monday in January next, for the county of Tuscaloosa, move said Court for judgment against you, according to the statute, in such case made and provided.”

The service of the notice was acknowledged by Hill, and not executed on the others. The motion was discontinued as to Jenkins and Armstrong, and judgment against Hill, for five per cent, per month, upon the amount of the debt and damages, from the return day of the said execution, to the day of rendering this judgment. The plaintiff assigns for error:

1. The Court erred in entertaining the motion, and rendering judgment against the plaintiff in error, because a term had intervened between the return of the execution, and the institution of these proceedings.

2. The notice is uncertain and insufficient.

3. The proceedings were instituted against the plaintiff in error, jointly with John Jenkins and Thomas Armstrong, and afterwards discontinued as to the latter, which operates a discontinuance as to all.

4. Judgment should have been rendered for the penalty of five per cent, a month, only up to the term, next after the execution was returnable.

*5435. The evidence is insufficient to maintain the action.

6. Judgment should have been for the defendant below.

The first and fourth assignments of error, as they present the sames questions, will be considered together. The question depends on the construction, to be put on the acts of the Legislature, author-ising proceedings by motion against sheriffs.

By the act of eighteen hundred and seven, (Aikin’s Digest, 173,) a remedy is given against sheriffs, for failing to return an execution, by motion, and the Court is authorised to enter a fine of five dollars per month, on the amount of the judgment against him.

By an act, passed in eighteen hundred arid nineteen, (Aikin’s Digest, 164,) a remedy is also given by motion against the sheriff; for failing to pay over money, or for failing to return an execution. These acts are silent as to the time when the motion is to be made By section seventy-four, .of the.act of eighteen hundred and seven, (Aikin’s Digest, 174,) a motion is allowed against the sheriff, at the next succeeding Court, from which the execution issued, and fifteen per cent, per annum allowed to be recovered against him, for failing to pay over money when he has returned an execution satisfied. It is insisted that these acts must all be taken together, as they relate to the same subject, and that they shew that no motion can be made against the sheriff after the return of the execution. Admitting, as we do, that these statutes must be taken altogether, we can see no reason to justify such *544a construction: The acts, to be sure, all relate to the same subject,'but to different aspects of it. The Legislature have thought proper to make a distinction between them, and it is not the province of this Court to say that no distinction exists.— Even if the distinction were purely arbitrary, it is the Legislative will, and should be respected. These assignments of error, are not well taken.

To what extent all the acts giving penalties by motion, against sheriffs, may be controlled, by the acts.prohibiting penal actions, after one year, as the question has not been argued, we give no opinion.

The uncertainty of the notice refered to, in the second assignment, is, in argument, said to be, that it is not stated in the notice, on which of the statutes the plaintiff will rely; whether on the act of eighteen hundred and seven, or on the act of eighteen hundred and nineteen, before cited. By the first of these acts, a penalty of five dollars per month, is allowed against a sheriff for failing to return an execution. ■ By the last recited act, no rule is laid down, by which the measure of damages for a failure to return an execution, is tobe ascertained. This Court is aware, that the construction which the Circuit Courts have put on this act, has been to allow the whole amount of the execution, to be recovered from the sheriff. But to give a penalty so enormous as this might be, by mere construction,' is not warranted by the established rule for expounding penal statutes, which is, that they be construed strictly. If the ■ defendant in execution, be insolvent, or unable to pay, there ears, be no rea*545son why the mere failure of the sheriff, to return the execution, should entitle the plaintiff in execution, to make the money from the sheriff. If the defendant be in fact able to pay, the plaintiff may suggest, that by due diligence, the money could have been made, and thus secure his debt.

Gould this question now be considered open,— this Court, for the reasons which have been given,, would determine that the act of eighteen hundred and nineteen, above referred to, merely recognizes and refers to the previous act of eighteen hundred and seven, which gives a penally of five dollars-per month, on each hundred dollars, of the amount of the execution; but not only have the Circuit Courts, uniformly interpreted this statute differently, but this Court has at different times recognized the correctness of that construction. (See Ala. Rep. 376. 1 Stewart 63, 3 Stewart 134.) The law having been thus considered as settled, and this construction acquiesced in, for such a length of time, it would be unwise now to put a different-construction on the statute.

It appears, then, that there were two statutes, under which the plaintiff below could have proceeded. One is purely penal in its character,— the other in the nature of a penalty. It was the duty of the plaintiff below, to advise the defendant on which he intended to proceed. The language of the notice — that “ the plaintiff will move the Court for judgment against you, according to the statute in such case, made and provided,” did not convey to the mind of the defendant below*, with any precision, what was demanded of him,- — wbe-*546ther the fine of five per cent, on the amount of the •judgment, or the amount of the judgment itself. If the former, the Court had a discretion over the matter, and the sheriff might show circumstances in palliation. — -1 Stew. 375.

As the rights, both of plaintiff and defendant were different under the two acts before recited, at least in proceedings of this summary and highly penal character, it was the duty of the plaintiff below to inform the sheriff, on which of the two acts authorising"this proceeding, he would act. This assignment of error, therefore, is sustained,

The answer to the third assignment of error is, that as the sureties of the sheriff were not served with notice, they were not parties to the proceeding against the sheriff. There was, therefore, no .necessity to discontinue against them, and the discontinuance, which appears by the record to have been entered as to them, was a mere idle act, which can not prejudice. This point has been expressly ruled by this Court, in the case of Lyon vs The State Bank, 1 Stewart 470.

The fifth assignment of error must be sustained. The record does not shew, that it was proven that the sheriff did not return the execution. This, it was in the power of. the plaintiff to do, and was a fact at least as important and necessary to be proved, as any other in the cause, to warrant a judgment against the sheriff. It can not be presumed— In these summary proceedings, every thing necessary to sustain the judgment, must appear, by the record, to have been proved, as has been repeatedly decided by this Court.

The judgment must be reversed,