67 Ga. 440 | Ga. | 1881
This action was dismissed on demurrer.' The substance of the declaration is that the sheriff, who is plaintiff, was ruled for money — the price of property of a defendant in execution, which was bid off by the defendant, Harrell, and to whom the sheriff made a deed for the property; that he was sent to jail for failure to pay the money over under the rule ; that the defendant was a claimant of the fund which the land brought, and induced the sheriff to believe that he would certainly get the money under superior liens which he held, if the sheriff should be ruled for, it by other claimants, and thus got him, the sheriff, to receive a check on a bank in Americus in lieu of the cash, representing the check to be good, assuring him that it would be paid and promising to see to it that the sheriff should not be hurt, but the money would be paid for the property sold by him, Harrell, in any event; that Harrell, notwithstanding all these promises, instructed the bank not to pay the check, and failed and refused to pay the money, whereby the plaintiff was attached for contempt, put in jail court week for several days, lost the profits of his office during that time, suffered much in body and mind, and was brought into public odium and contempt, to his and his family’s disgrace, and to his damage ten thousand dollars.
Unquestionably the sheriff would be entitled to recover unless the claim be illégal, because against public policy. Is it against public policy, and therefore illegal? If he was induced to do an unlawful act in the regular course of his official business by the promises, or entreaties, or arrangements of anybody whereby he became guilty of
Of all officers of the law sheriffs should be freest from favoritism and partiality, and on no occasion, and in the discharge of no duty of their responsible office, should they be more so than in public sales. Cash, not credit, is that which the law requires them to exact from every bidder, and no man’s note, or check, or draft, is, in the cold and impartial eye of justice, the equivalent of cash. Once relax the rule, and the gate to collusion and fraud is swung back so wide that an ocean of corruption would enter, and the fairness of public sales would be at an end. Arrangements might be made to credit one to his advantage and to the disadvantage of all others, and the sheriffs would be tempted to violate the law in order to put money in their own pockets; or would be careless to execute it at public sales if a rich bidder promised to pay at court; and if he fail to do so and the sheriff be punished for contempt by imprisonment, the sheriff could recover damages from the man he favored, and be thus indemnified for the very penalty which the law affixed for its violation by its own officer. If when the sheriff failed to respond to a money rule and was imprisoned therefor, he could recover damages for that imprisonment from one who deluded him into the illegal act which caused it, of course the measure of damages would be in proportion to the extent of his sufferings and the length of the imprisonment ; and thus the law would actually give him a premium to hold out against its mandate as long as humanity could endure the confinement in order to recover
In the strong cases put in this opinion, and the severe terms used, it is not intended to animadvert on the conduct of either party in this cause, but to show to what extent the principle might be carried, if once established ; and thus to show that the principle which would be established, if a recovery in damages could be had for the imprisonment and sufferings incurred by this sheriff, by reason of his own malfeasance, though prompted by another, would lead to the most disastrous results, and open a wide field for corruption and fraud, and is thus in the teeth of public policy.
Nor is it meant to intimate that the sheriff cannot recover the amount of the check or draft given him by the defendant, with interest and costs ; but it is meant to rule, and to that full length it goes, that in no case, where the sheriff or any officer of the law who violates it and is put in jail by its authorityfor that violation, can he recover damages for that imprisonment from anybody, though the person he sues, and from whom he would recover such damages, fradulently and deceitfully deceived him, and violated solemn assurances in not coming to the officers relief and paying him what he promised, and thus saving him from the imprisonment. To authorize the recovery would be contrary to public policy, and therefore illegal. 60 Ga., 277 and 450 are on the general line of this view of the law, and throw light on the matters herein discussed. See also 9 Ga., 137.
Judgment affirmed.