Jones v. Hart

60 Mo. 362 | Mo. | 1875

Hough, Judge,

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of DeKalb county, on motion, against the defendant, Hart, as principal, and the defendant House, as surety, on a delivery bond given by them to the sheriff of Caldwell county, for the delivery of certain personal property, levied upon by said sheriff as the property of Hart, under an execution issued from the Circuit Court of DeKalb county, on a judgment rendered in said court against said Hart, in favor of the plaintiff Jones.

The judgment was rendered at the October Term, 1873, for the sum of $4,634.91, and directed that certain real property, attached in the cause, should be sold to satisfy said judgment; and if it should prove insufficient, that the residue of the judgment should be levied of the remaining real estate, goods and chattels of the defendant. On this judgment a general execution was issued, directed to the sheriff of Caldwell county, which was by the sheriff levied on certain real estate, and also on several horses and cows, for which latter he took a delivery bond, as provided by law, signed by the defendant Hart, as principal, and the defendant House, as surety. The sheriff iu his return shows, that the defendant failed to return said property on the day appointed, or at any other time, and that lie made sale of the real estate for a sum which was insufficient to satisfy the execution. At the April term, 1874, to which said execution was returnable, the defendant Hart moved to quash the execution, for the reason that it was ageneral one and did not follow the judgment, and for the further reason that a special execution, in pursuance of the judgment, had been issued, directed to the sheriff of DeKalb county, under which the real property described in the judgment had been levied upon and advertised for sale, but had not then been sold.

On the same day, the defendant filed a motion to “expunge” the judgment under which the execution was issued. On the succeeding day the plaintiff filed a motion to enter a general judgment nunc pro tunc, and on the day following, the mo*364tion to “expunge” the judgment was overruled and the motion for the entry nunc-pro tunc was sustained and a general judgment directed to be entered nunc pro tunc, to all of which the defendant excepted.

The only evidence on which the entry of the general judgment was made, was a memorandum in the judge’s docket, and a similar one in the clerk’s docket, showing that the cause •was submitted to a jury and that they returned a verdict for $4,634.91.

Afterwards a motion, previously filed by the plaintiff, for ' judgment on the delivery bond, came on to be heard, and plaintiff introduced testimony as to the value of the property, and the defendant then offered in evidence a forfeited mortgage, duly acknowledged and recorded, executed by the* defendant Hart before Jones recovered judgment against him to one "William J. Hart of the property described in said bond, which was rejected by the court and defendants excepted. Defendants then offered to prove that subsequent to the execution of the delivery bond, and before the day appointed for its delivery, said William J. Hart, mortgagee, took the property described in the delivery bond from the possession of the defendant, whiclrtestimony was rejected and defendant excepted. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, on the motion for $592.

It is agreed by counsel, that the judgment under which the execution in question was issued, and the proceedings complained of were had, is the same judgment which was brought under review in the case of Jones vs. Hart, ante p. 351 at the present term, and which has been reversed by this court. While all rights which have been acquired, bona 'fide, by any third person, under any execution issued on this judgment, which execution has pot been impugned as irregular or invalid, will be respected and preserved, the defendant, whose property has been sold, is entitled toa restitution of the fruits of the sale. (Shields vs. Powers, 29 Mo., 317.) If the property itself is in the hands of the sheriff, or has been transferred to the possession of .the plaintiff, through the instrumen*365talitv of the execution, lie is entitled to be restored to that. (Gott vs. Powell, 41 Mo., 420; Hann. & St. Jo. R. R. Co. vs. Brown, 43 Mo., 294.) This principle must also reach any right the plaintiff has acquired, by motion against the defendants on the delivery bond, for a failure of defendant to deliver, according to the terms of the bond, the property levied upon by the sheriff under the execution.

It is apparent, therefore, that it is immaterial whether or not error has been committed in the proceedings resulting in a judgment against the defendants on the motion of the plaintiff for a breach of the terms of the delivery bond.

The plaintiff must surrender all property and rights acquired by him under the execution, and to end all controversy, on that subject as to the personal property levied upon, the judgment for the plaintiff on the motion will be reversed.

All the judges concur, except Judge Sherwood, who expresses no opinion.
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