14 N.Y. 224 | NY | 1874
The" sole question presented on this appeal is, whether an action can be maintained against a sheriff to recover money collected on execution, without a previous demand of payment. The sheriff in collecting an execution acts as the officer of the court whose process it is, and also as the agent, appointed by law, of the party who seeks by aid of the writ to obtain satisfaction of the debt or thing awarded by the judgment. ' The money collected by the sheriff belongs to the plaintiff. The sheriff, when he receives it, takes it as the agent of the party who has the judgment, and it is money had and received by him to the plaintiff’s
In Dygert v. Crane, the action was brought against a sheriff for money collected on execution. The suit was commenced after the return day of the writ, but before a return had been made, and the court held that the action would lie, although no demand of payment had been made, and that the return of the execution by the sheriff and the payment of the money into court after the commencement of the suit, was no defence. The English cases maintain the same doctrine. (Dale v. Birch, 3 Camp., 346; Swain v. Merland, 1 B. & B., 370.) Dale v. Birch was an action for money had and received, to recover forty-nine pounds, which the defendant had collected as sheriff, under writ of fi. fa., at the plaintiff’s suit. No demand had been made, and this fact was urged as a defence to the action. Lord Ellenborough, after stating that the proceeding seemed to be vexatious, and that the court, on a proper application, might have staid the action, said: “ But, sitting here, I can only consider whether the action, in point of law, is maintainable, and I make no doubt that it is. Upon the sheriff’s return, the forty-nine pounds was certainly money had and received to the plaintiff’s use;
It is true that the sheriff', by the former writ in use in this State, was commanded to bring the money “ before our justice,” etc., on the return day, and so were the ancient precedents. Bat we have not found any authority for the proposition that the mandate of the writ was the sole ground upon which the sheriff was entitled to bring the' money into court, in discharge of his liability. Forms of writs furnish strong evidence of what the law was when they were devised, and of the duty of the officer to whom they are directed. And it may well be supposed that the right of the sheriff to bring money collected on process into court, was established when the precedents of executions referred to were framed, in view of the manifest justice or convenience of the practice. Section
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.