48 Ala. 276 | Ala. | 1872
This is a suit in chancery, commenced by Ann V. Eriend and her husband, John G. Friend, on the sixth day of January, 1868. John G. Friend, the husband, has died since the bill was filed, and the cause has proceeded in the name of Mrs. Friend alone. There are seven paragraphs in the bill, which, among other things, recite, but not in the order of the pleading, that Mrs. Friend and her said husband sued William C. Oliver, former sheriff of Greene county, in this State, in the chancery court of said county of Greene, on the twenty-seventh day of February, 1856, for a wrongful seizure and sale of certain cotton and wagon, the separate property of Mrs. Friend, derived from the will of her father, Henry Minor, deceased, who died in 1838. The cotton and wagon above mentioned had been seized by said Oliver, as such sheriff, as the property of said John G. Friend, in November, 1853, under sundry executions then in the said sheriff’s hands, against said John G. Friend. In the suit thus commenced in 1856, by Mrs, Friend and her said husband, against Oliver, a final decree was rendered by the chancel
The property of Mrs, Ann Y. Friend, Avhich this litigation seeks to restore to her, is the amount of money decreed to be paid her by the judgment in the chancery suit
It is urged by the learned counsel for the appellants, that the bonds of Johnson and LaFayette M. Minor are invalid; that they are not such bonds as are authorized by the statute for the purpose of indemnifying the sheriff against the consequences of an improper levy, when there are reasonable doubts as to the titled liability of the property proposed to be seized under the execution, and consequently they are wholly unauthorized, without consideration and void. From the facts of this case, this does not necessarily follow. Johnson and Minor were the sureties of John G. Friend on the contracts in judgment against them, before the judgments were rendered. This entitled them to make application to the sheriff to levy on
But the novelty, and the chief difficulty in this case, is the point next to be considered. It is this: Is Mrs. Friend entitled, in this way, to resort to the bonds aforesaid in order to enforce the collection of her decree against Oliver of the 22d of June, 1861, for $5,227.48? She is not a party to these bonds, and they have not been assigned or transferred to her by the sheriff. But they were given, in part at least, in order to subject property claimed by her to the use of the obligors, by a sale under the executions against them. The benefit that they expected was to come from her. She, in effect, furnished the consideration which, by operation of law, passed to them. The sheriff was a mere agent, engaged in executing a power for the benefit of the parties to the judgments. The bonds were not given to him for his private profit, or to enable him to convert the property of Mrs. Friend to the use of the obligors in the bonds, but to furnish him with the means of indemnifying her, in the event that the property seized
Besides, the basis of Mrs. Friend’s claim is, in effect, a foreign judgment. On such a judgment, the legal remedy by garnishment, possibly, could not be exerted against the debtors of Oliver, or persons having possession of his property. At least such remedy is doubtful and. not well ascertained. This would be sufficient grounds to resort to a court of chancery. — Bynum & Sims v. Sledge, 1 Stew. & Port. 135; 2 Smith Cond. R. 416. Chancery will also take jurisdiction when it would prevent a circuity or multiplicity of actions at law. Here, a proceeding by garnishment at law would involve the necessity of eleven litigations instead of one, because the parties to each bond would be entitled to answer and litigate their liability, if summoned, in separate and distinct issues, and it might be necessary to summon all in order to secure the satisfaction of Mrs. Friend’s judgment and decree against Oliver. — Morgan et al. v. Morgan et al., 3 Stew. 383; 2 Smith Cond. R. 314; Rev. Code, § 2974; Code, § 2546; Rev. Code, § 2892. There can be no doubt that the condition of these bonds is broken. They were given to protect Oliver not only against loss and damage, but also from liability. As soon as Oliver’s liability to Mrs. Friend was fixed by the decree of June 22d, 1861, for $5,227.48, and the obligors failed to discharge it, their bonds were broken. The bonds, then, are assets of Oliver, which might be resorted to on process of garnishment, in favor of Mrs. Friend, if her judgment was a decree of a legitimate court. — -Rev. Code, § 2892.
These bonds are not barred by the statute of limitation, applicable to them, which is ten years. — Rev. Code, § 2900;
The decree of the learned chancellor in the court below is correct, and in conformity to “right and justice,” as administered in a court of chancery. — Const, of Ala. 1867, Art. I, § 15. It is therefore affirmed at the cost of the appellants, in this court and in the court below.