36 Ala. 600 | Ala. | 1860
The question presented by the demurrer to the appellant’s plea is, whether a judgment in favor of the claimant, on a trial of the right of property, is a bar to an action for the tort committed by taking the property unddr the execution. The argument in- favor of
In the trial of the right of property, the claimant is not the plaintiff': ou the contrary, he is the defendant. Hence it has been decided, that the plaintiff iu execution, who is proceeding in chancery for the subjection of the same property to his debt, may be compelled to elect between his remedy at law and in chancery, and compelled to abandon one or the other. — Pl. & M. Bank v. Borland, 5 Ala. 531; Pl. & M. Bank v. Walker, 7 Ala. 926. Hence it is, also, that, under the old law, the plaintiff in execution was required to give security for costs. — McAdams v. Beard & Henderson, 34 Ala. 478; Jacott v. Hobson, 11 Ala. 434. It is true that the suit originates by the act of the claimant, when he makes the bond and affidavit. Wiswall v. Gliddon, 4 Ala. 357; McAdams v. Beard & Henderson, supra.
Tire trial of the right'of property is an anomalous proceeding, initiated by the claimant, and in which the plaintiff iu execution is the actoi’, or plaintiff. When the property of one is levied on, by virtue of an execution
The opinion of this court in Roberts v. Heim, 27 Ala. 678, indicates that the same view of this question was taken then by the court, though the point is not expressly decided.
It is true that, as an incident to the proceeding for the trial of the right of property, .the claimant obtains a restoration of his property; but this restoration results from
Judgment affirmed.