Miller v. Ashton

7 Blackf. 29 | Ind. | 1844

Sullivan, J.

— Debt by Ashton and Teall against Miller and Miller on a delivery-bond. Plea, that the bond was given without any good or valuable consideration in this, to wit, that on, &c., a fieri facias was issued from the La Porte Circuit Court on a judgment in favour of Ashton and Teall against S. Miller, one of the plaintiffs in error, which, by the consent of Miller, was levied on certain tracts of land described in the plea, which were appraised according to the statute, and which were more than sufficient, if sold at onehtdf of their appraised value, to pay the judgment on which said execution issued and all costs; that the sheriff, without selling said lands, or in any wise disposing of said levy, did, afterwards, to wit, on, &c., seize and take in execution, by-virtue of said writ, the goods and chattels named in the condition of said, bond, and was about proceeding to sell the same without first selling said lands, &c.; wherefore the de*30fendants, to prevent the sale, executed said bond, &c. Demurrer to the plea, and demurrer sustained. The damages were thereupon, by consent of parties, assessed by the Court, and judgment rendered for the plaintiffs.

The defence set up in the plea was sufficient to bar the action. In Lasselle v. Moore, 1 Blackf. 226, it was decided, that, where the real estate of a defendant was held by a venditioni exponas, the plaintiff could not take out an- execution of fieri facias and levy on other property; and that if he did so, the Court would set aside such execution as illegal. In the subsequent case of M'Intosh et al. v. Chew et al. Id. 289, the Court say, that goods or lands taken in execution must be considered as a satisfaction of the judgment-debt, and may be pleaded in bar of any other action against the same defendant for the same demand, until their insufficiency is made manifest by a sale and return.

If a levy on land sufficient to pay a judgment be, until it is legally disposed of, a satisfaction of the judgment, it follows that another levy by virtue of the same writ, after a levy sufficient to pay the debt has been made, is illegal until the first levy is disposed of, and would for that reason be set aside on motion.

According to the second section of the act subjecting real and personal estate to execution, R. S. 1838, p. 276, whenever an execution shall issue against the goods and chattels, lands and tenements, of any defendant, it is made the duty of the sheriff to levy such execution upon such part of the defendant’s estate as he may direct, provided there be no doubt as to the defendant’s title to the property so selected. Whatever the object of that statute may be, it would undoubtedly defeat it, if a sheriff may at his pleasure abandon a levy made according to the direction of the defendant, and levy upon other property against his consent.

We are of opinion, therefore, that from the previous decisions of this Court, as well as from a fair construction of the statute, the seizure of the goods of 8. Miller by the sheriff was, under the circumstances, an illegal act; that it gave him no right to the goods ; and that the bond for the delivery of the property cannot be enforced.

•T. 1L Bradley and J. A. Liston, for the plaintiffs. A. L. Osborn, for the defendants. Per Curiam.

— The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.

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