3 Mass. 215 | Mass. | 1807
The opinion of the Court was afterwards delivered by
The plaintiff, to prove his title to, and possession of, the locus in quo, gave in evidence an execution issued on a judgment recovered by him against Potter, and the return thereon. By the return it appears, that, on the 17th of June, 1801, the
The objection to the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s evidence is founded on the position, that the levy of the execution, and its return and registry, do not amount to an actual livery of seisin and of possession, to enable the plaintiff to maintain trespass against the defendant Potter for continuing his possession; but that the plaintiff, after the levy, ought to have made an actual entry before he commenced his suit. And this position is supposed to be justified by the principles of the common law, which apply to the extent of an elegit on a moiety of the debtor’s lands. For the sheriff returns on the elegit, that he had delivered a moiety of the lands to the plaintiff, which delivery does not give the plaintiff the actual possession, but only a right of entry and of possession.
. In the levy of an execution on lands, two things are to be con sidered—the authority of the sheriff, and the rights of * the plaintiff resulting from the legal exercise of that [ * 218 ] authority. In the case of an elegit, the plaintiff’s right under the extent is correctly stated in the objection; and this right results from the authority of the sheriff, and from the manner in which it is exercised. It is the sheriff’s duty to empanel a jury, who on oath inquire what freehold lands the defendant holds within his bailiwick, and fix the yearly value of them. When the jury have ascertained the lands, and appraised their yearly value, the sheriff delivers just one moiety, according to that appraisement, to the plaintiff, to hold until out of the annual profits, as valued by the jury, he receive his debt and interest. The inquisition is then returned, and entered of record in the Court whence the elegit issued. If the sheriff had in fact put the defendant out of, and the plaintiff in possession, under the inquisition, which seems anciently to have been the practice, it was supposed that the defendant had no remedy, if the sheriff’-s proceedings were irregular, but by moving
Let us now advert to our statutes making real estate liable to pay debts, and providing for the taking of it in execution.
[ * 219 ] *The execution may be levied on all the freehold estate of the defendant; and, in one case, on the rents and profits.
When the execution is levied on real estate, all the defendant’s title to, and interest in, the estate is transferred to, and becomes the property of the plaintiff, at a reasonable appraisement of the value. In levying the execution, the sheriff proceeds without the intervention of a jury. The plaintiff shows him certain lands as the estate of the defendant, and directs the sheriff to satisfy the execution, by a levy on those lands. Three freeholders are then selected, one by the plaintiff, and two by the sheriff, -if the defendant neglect to choose one, which he may do. These freeholders on oath appraise the land, or so much thereof as is equal in value to the execution and the charges of levying, describing by metes and bounds the land thus appraised. The officer is then expressly directed to deliver possession and seisin of the appraised lands to the creditor. It is also provided that the execution, when returned and registered pursuant to the statute, shall make as good a title to such creditor, his heirs and assigns, as the debtor had therein.
The creditor, therefore, is the purchaser of the estate for the full value, acording to the appraisement of it by disinterested freehold ers: he has the possession and seisin of it, and his title is as good as the debtor had. Although there may be a concurrent possession, there cannot be a concurrent-seism of land? • and as l«vr>rv nf seisin
By the statute of 1788, c. 51, it is enacted that when an executor or administrator shall have lands to set off to discharge any execution, the executor or administrator shall be seised and possessed of the real estate so set off to the use of such person as would have been entitled to the money, had the execution been satisfied with money. And the Court of Probate may make distribution thereof as personal estate. In this statute, made in pari materia, the provision is express that the executor or administrator shall be seised md possessed of the estate set off. And no reason can be assigned
It may, however, be objected, that this construction of the statute will be inconvenient, for the sheriff may levy the execu- [ * 221 ] tian * on lands not the defendant’s, and, under color thereof, wrongfully dispossess the right owner. When the construction of a statute is doubtful, an argument from inconvenience will have weight. The construction of the statute, which we are now considering, is not doubtful, but very clear; and besides the inconvenience suggested, if it ever arise, cannot arise in this case, for the judgment debtor was the tenant of the land.
Our opinion is, that, when an execution is regularly levied on lands of the defendant, and duly returned and registered, and seisin and possession delivered by the sheriff to the plaintiff, he may, by virtue of the seisin and possession so delivered, maintain either a real action, counting on his own seisin, or he may maintain trespass against the defendant, who shall continue his possession after the levy without the plaintiff’s consent
Judgment according to verdict.
[Gore vs Brazier, post, 523.—Wyman vs. Brigden, 4 Mass. 150.—Bigelow vs. Jones, 4 Mass. 512.—Barrett vs Porter, 14 Mass. 143.—Proctor vs. Newhall, 17 Mass 81 —Ed.]