43 Barb. 373 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1864
I am of opinion that in rejecting the offer of the defendant to show that the property levied upon under the attachment and execution was the property of William H. Herrick, and not of the judgment debtor, the judge at the circuit fell into an error.
The question turns upon the construction of certain statutory provisions respecting the duties of a sheriff in executing an attachment.
The code directs that the sheriff shall proceed upon a warrant of attachment, in all respects, in the manner required of him by law in case of attachments against absent debtors. (Sec. 232.) In such cases, the revised statutes provide that if any goods seized as the property of the debtor shall be claimed by any other person as his property, the sheriff shall summon and try the validity of such claim, “in the same manner, and with the like effect, as in case of seizure under execution.” (2 R. S. 4, § 10.) If the jury find the property of the goods to be in the claimant, the sheriff shall forthwith deliver them to him; unless the attaching creditor shall, by bond, indemnify the sheriff for the detention of such goods; in which case the sheriff shall detain them. (§ 11.)
It appeared on the trial that soon after the plaintiffs delivered the warrant- of attachment to the sheriff, his deputy informed them, by letter, that he had made a levy, but that the title to the property would be contested, and- requested them to furnish a bond of indemnity to the sheriff, which they did, without requiring him to summon a jury to try the title. Subsequently, they obtained a judgment on their demand, and delivered an execution to the sheriff's deputy’’ That officer afterwards notified the plaintiffs that he had advertised the property for sale, and one of the plaintiffs attended at the time and place appointed for the sale, but-did not see the property, and the deputy informed him that’ it had been taken from his possession, and there would be no sale. The execution was afterwards returned nulla bona.
The ruling in question necessarily assumes that the de
The act of 1813, “for relief against absconding and absent debtors” provided merely that “if any sheriff shall ignorantly seize any goods which shall be claimed by any person as his property, he may summon a jury, and if they find the property to be in the claimant, the sheriff shall deliver the goods to him, and shall not be liable to prosecution for such seizure.” The additional provisions of the revised statutes already referred to, are new. The revisers, in reporting the sections .cited,- say they are varied 'only so far as to allow the sheriff to retain the goods, -upon sufficient indemnity, according to the decisions of the supreme court in cases of inquisition upon an execution, in Bayley v. Bates, and Van Cleef v. Fleet, (sugra; 3 R. S. 2d ed. 613.)
The construction above suggested is supported by the case of Batchellor v. Schuyler, (3 Hill, 386.) It was there held that where goods seized on an attachment against an absconding debtor aré claimed by a third person, the finding of a jury summoned to try the validity of the claim is not conclusive upon the parties; and hence the sheriff may refuse to deliver the goods to the' claimant, though the finding be in his favor, and no bond of indemnity be tendered by the attaching creditor ; and that the only consequence of such refusal is, that the sheriff assumes the burthen of showing, in an action against him by the claimant, that the goods are the property of the debtor. The reasoning of Chief Justice Nelson, in that case, throws much light upon the meaning of the statute.
The construction' contended for by the plaintiffs might work great injustice to the officers of the law. If the judgment debtor in fact has no property within the bailiwick of the sheriff, why should that officer, if he has acted in good faith, be compelled to pay the demand of the attaching creditor ? The rights of the creditor are sufficiently guarded by allowing him, on tendering a bond of indemnity, to deprive
It has been held, in England, that in the defense of an action for a false return of nulla bona, to an execution, the sheriff may show that the goods of the debtor were absorbed by a prior execution in his hands; (5 B. & C. 660; 2 Gr. Ev. 555, § 592;) and in such case the plaintiff may rebut this evidence by proving that the prior execution was concocted in fraud, and that the sheriff had previous notice thereof, and was required by the plaintiff not to pay over the proceeds to the prior creditor. (Id.)
In Massachusetts it has been repeatedly decided that in an action against a sheriff for not seizing upon execution chattels which he had attached upon the original writ, it is a good defense that such chattels were the property of strangers, and not of the debtor. (4 Mass. Rep. 498. 12 id. 167. 13 id. 224.) The sheriff is not concluded, in such cases, by his return of a levy. (6 M. & S. 42. 23 Wend. 291.) Besides, in the case at bar there was no formal return.
In order to present this question in the most favorable light for the plaintiffs, I have assumed that the bond of indemnity, although furnished voluntarily, on request, has the same effect as if it had been tendered after an inquisition found in favor of the claimant.
The evidence introduced by the plaintiff was sufficient, prima facie, as against the sheriff, to establish property in the judgment debtor; but the sheriff had a right to controvert that point, and because the right was denied him I think there should be a new trial.
J. C. Smith, Welles and E. Darwin Smith, Justices.