History
  • No items yet
midpage
King v. . Morrison
13 N.C. 341
N.C.
1830
Check Treatment

The idea upon which this petition goes is that the seizure of property under a fieri facias is a discharge of the debt. It is constructively so in certain cases — that is, where the sheriff really takes sufficient to pay the debt, and will not dispose of it; and to debt on the *Page 217 judgment it may be pleaded; for it would be wrong to enforce the judgment by a second suit, and also keep the property on (342) the first execution. But if the defendant was never deprived of his property by the sheriff, or if he was, and has got it back again, either with or without the consent of the sheriff, it would be monstrous to say that in such a case the defendant had paid his debt. The levy on property is not actual payment which the law always aims at. It is only constructively so to prevent wrong. It is deemed a payment in those cases where if it were not the defendant would be twice deprived of his property on the same judgment. In all other instances it is no payment. Without citing other authorities these positions will sufficiently appear from Clark v. Withers, 1 Salk., 322, and Taylor v. Baker, 2 Mod., 214. It will be seen from this that it must follow that the petitioners can have no relief; for the plaintiff has received his money from no quarter. All the defendants are but one to this purpose. Payment by one is payment by all; but there must be payment by some one. Here there is none.

PER CURIAM. Petition dismissed.

Cited: Binford v. Alston, 15 N.C. 353; Eason v. Petway, 18 N.C. 46;Shaw v. McFarlane, 23 N.C. 218; Gatewood v. Burns, 99 N.C. 360;Aldridge v. Loften, 104 N.C. 126.

(343)

Case Details

Case Name: King v. . Morrison
Court Name: Supreme Court of North Carolina
Date Published: Jun 5, 1830
Citation: 13 N.C. 341
Court Abbreviation: N.C.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.
Your Notebook is empty. To add cases, bookmark them from your search, or select Add Cases to extract citations from a PDF or a block of text.