| Mo. | Oct 15, 1847

Napton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action on the official bond of Milburn, as sheriff of St. Louis county, and the breach assigned was, that Milburn did not return, a certain execution as he was commanded to do. The defendant pleaded, *1901st, non est factum; 2nd, that he did return the execution on said 13th November, 1843; 3rd, that he returned the execution during the term at which it was returnable; 4th, that defendant kept back the execution with the knowledge and consent of plaintiffs. Issue was taken on these pleas. The defendant by leave, filed as additional pleas, 1st, that the execution was not returnable to any term of the Circuit Court of Macon county; 2nd, that the return day mentioned in the execution was not a day in any term of the Circuit Court of Macon county; 3rd, Same as second, with the addition, that defendant made return of the execution, at the term of said court next after the return day mentioned in the writ.

The case was finally submitted to the Circuit Court upon the following agreed state of facts: “On the 31st day of December in the year 1841, at the December term of the Circuit Court held in and for the county of Macon, Emeline Dodd by the consideration and decree of said court, recovered against one Benj. Dodd, as alimony and for maintenance, the sum of five hundred dollars and costs of suit, and afterwards on the 20th day of April 1843, an execution was sued out of said Macon County Circuit Court by said Emeline Dodd against said Benj. Dodd, directed to the sheriff of St. Louis county, by which said execution the said sheriff was commanded of the goods and chattels and real estate of the said B. Dodd, he cause to be made the said sum of five hundred dollars and seven dollars and fifty cents costs, and that he have the said writ before the Judge of the said Macon Circuit Court at the court-house of the town of Bloomington, in said county of Macon, on the 13th day of November, 1843, to satisfy the same, and that he should certify to the said Judge how he had executed the said writ, and that the said sheriff should have then and there said writ. That said execution was delivered to the defendant, who was then the sheriff of St. Louis county, to be executed, on the 27th April, 1843, with the amount to be collected endorsed upon the back thereof; that said execution was not returned to the office of the clerk of Macon County Circuit Court on the said 13th day of November, 1843; but the same was enclosed in an envelope, and directed to the clerk of the Macon Circuit Court at Bloomington, Macon county, Missouri, and mailed at St. Louis Post Office on the 11th day of March, 1844, and received by the clerk of said court between the 20th and 30th days of April, 1844, with a return endorsed thereon, that the defendant had no goods and chattels, lands or tenements whereof to levy and make the amount of the said judgment or any part thereof, in the said countjT of St. Louis; that the November term for 1843 of said Macon Circuit Court *191adjourned on the 10th day of November, 1843, and was not in session on the day when said writ was made returnable. That afterwards, and before the commencement of the suit, said Emeline Dodd intermarried with Alfred Ray.

Upon this agreed case, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff.

This suit is based upon the provisions of the 52d section of the execution law, as it stood in the Rev. Code of 1835. That section made the sheriff liable upon failing to return a writ according to law, for the whole amount of money specified in the writ.

The writ in this case was made returnable in vacation, whereas the law requires it to be made returnable to the next succeeding term, unless the plaintiff otherwise directs. Does this error make the writ void?

The authorities cited at the bar are decisive upon this point. A writ returnable out of term is merely erroneous and not void. Campbell vs. Cummings, 2 Burr, 1187; Cramer vs. Van Alstyne, 9 John R., 386.

A process merely erroneous, is a justification to the officer who executes it; and on the other hand, the officer who fails to execute it, and is sought to be held responsible for such delinquency, cannot take advantage oí the error. 2 Saund., 101, n. 2, and cases there cited.

If we take these principles to be settled in relation to final process, we do not see how the defendant can escape the penalty affixed by law to his failure in not returning the, execution against Dodd, according to the directions of the law, regardless of the mistake of the clerk who issued it. The case in 4 Bibb, 332" court="Ky. Ct. App." date_filed="1816-05-21" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/wilson-v-huston-8685215?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8685215">4 Bibb, 332, (Wilson vs. Huston,) is directly in point. The execution in that case, was made returnable more than 90 days from its test, when by the law of Kentucky, the execution should have been returnable in 90 days. The court held that the return day was fixed by lawr; that the writ was not void, but that the sheriff was bound to obey it; that the sheriff was bound to take notice of the law, and as the return day was fixed by the law, his duty was to return it on that day and not on the one erroneously specified in the writ. It is impossible to distinguish that case from this in principle. Instead of being returnable; within 90 days, as in Kentucky,1'the writ here is returnable, as in England, in term time, and the authorities upon which tire Kentucky court rested their opinion, are more directly and literally applicable to our statute than to theirs.

The hardship of the case is most manifest; but it grows out of the statute, which inflicts a penalty upon the sheriff'greatly disproportioned in many cases to the delinquency. The principles of law fixing the sheriff’s *192liability, are the same, which in other cases would be essential to his protection.

Judge McBride concurring,

the judgment is affirmed.

Scott, J., did not sit in this cause.
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