74 Minn. 44 | Minn. | 1898
This action was brought to recover the value of a lumber wagon which plaintiff alleges the defendant wrongfully took and converted. The defendant admitted the taking, but in justification of doing so he alleges: That he then was the duly-elected and acting sheriff of Big Stone county in this state. That on April 13, 1897, an execution was issued out of the district court in and for said
The cause was tried in the district court of Big Stone county, to which court it had been appealed from the municipal court of the city of Ortonville, upon questions of law alone; but the record returned to the district court from the court wherein it was previously tried contained the pleadings and all the evidence received therein on the trial. The case was tried by the court upon such return, and a judgment rendered reversing that of the municipal court, and giving the plaintiff judgment for the amount demanded in his complaint; and from the latter judgment this appeal is taken.
The case was tried by the defendant upon the theory that the execution by virtue of which he took the wagon, being regular upon its face, was a sufficient justification for such act, and protected him from any liability for so doing. The sheriff generally acts in a ministerial capacity, and he is bound to execute process issued from a court having jurisdiction, when the power to execute such process is conferred upon him by law, when it is in due and regular form, is fair upon its face and properly delivered to him. Hazards and dangers frequently embarrass a sheriff in the execution of process, and he is often in peril, even when acting in the utmost good faith. Hence the general rule is quite well settled that he is protected in the execution of process fair on its face. He is not con
But this rule of “process fair on its face” is one of protection merely, and personal to the officer himself, and affords him no shelter where he is the moving party in causing it to be wrongfully issued solely for his own benefit, and where he knows the judgment upon which it is issued to have been paid and satisfied. The parties interested in the judgment upon which the execution was issued were the plaintiff and defendant, and the judgment, including costs, was satisfied in fact and in law, and so appeared of record, and to the actual vknowledge of the defendant sheriff. The judgment upon which defendant relies for his justification under the execution was rendered and docketed February 1,1897, and was satisfied in full March 17, 1897, by attorney, and an entry thereof made in the docket opposite such entry. The execution in question was issued April 13, 1897, solely for collection of the fees of the sheriff, amounting to $11.60, incurred in another action, although the execution recites that they were incurred in the action between the parties named therein. The fees — $11.60—were not inserted in the original execution at the time it was issued. These costs had not then been taxed, and it does not appear that they ever were taxed. They were costs which were incurred after the judgment was satisfied, March 17, 1897, and were never taxed. It is fairly inferable that the sheriff had notice of all these facts before he levied upon the wagon in question, and many of the facts were proven beyond doubt. In fact, there is no dispute as to the facts. The sheriff did not testify in his own behalf.
Upon these facts we do not think that the doctrine that the sheriff was protected in the execution of the process applies, even assuming it to be fair on its face. The proceeding was for the benefit of the sheriff, and, if he was not the instigator of it, there can be no dofibt but that he had knowledge of the entire illegal transaction, and was a party to it.
We cannot sanction such a proceeding, and the judgment is affirmed.