106 Mich. 79 | Mich. | 1895
It is conceded that the levy upon and sale of plaintiff’s property were wrongful. The property
It is next urged that the court failed to instruct the jury that their verdict must be based upon the testimony given. Defendants’ counsel, although making other requests, did not ask such a charge. The circumstances were not such as to suggest to either court or counsel for defendants that such an instruction should be given. The record contains nothing from which an inference of prejudice can be drawn. The jurors, at the threshold of the trial, had been sworn to well and truly try, and a true verdict give, according to law and the evidence given in open court.
The property had been taken by an ex-sheriff several months after his term as sheriff had passed, and a year after the writ itself had expired. Defendants offered, in open court, to apply the proceeds of the sale upon the judgment upon which the execution issued, and asked to have the amount so offered allowed in mitigation of damages. The point is ruled by Northrup v. McGill, 27 Mich. 234; Dalton v. Laudahn, Id. 529 ; Bringard v. Stellwagen, 41 Mich. 54. In Stilson v. Gibbs, 40 Mich. 42, there was a valid execution.
The judgment is affirmed.