19 Ark. 319 | Ark. | 1858
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The action was trespass de bonis asportatis, by Norton against Norris, White, Yandever, Mayers, Hanly and Wheeler. The pleas were joint, and were, 1st, the general issue; 2d, a special plea of justification, setting up that the supposed trespass was under authority-of an execution against one W. H. Norton, and said White, placed in the hands of said Norris, as sheriff, to be levied: which, accordingly, was levied upon the property in question, which, after having been regularly advertised, was duly sold, and the said Vandever, White, Hanly, Wheeler and Mayers became the purchasers thereof, who took and carried the same away, and converted the same to their own use.
Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff .below: bill of exceptions setting out an agreed case, and appeal to this Court.
The substance.of the agreed case is, th.at o.ne Paschal, having a judgment in the Crawford Circuit Court against Wm. H. Norton .and the appellant White, caused a fi. fa. to be issued thereon and placed in the hands of the appellant Norris, who was the sheriff of Sebastian county, who, in virtue thereof, seized upon the property in question, aifd, after advertising it according to law, sold it at public auction to satisfy the execution: that the property, thus advertised and sold, belonged to the appellee, and was in his possession at the time of the levy, and was of the value of .|500: that the appellee, at the time, protested that the property was his, and denied that it was subject to seizure as the property of Wm. H. Norton, and claimed a trial of the right of property, but afterwards, on the same day, he, with two qthers, executed to the sheriff a delivery bond, with the express understanding, at the time, that he was not thereby to be precluded from asserting his own right to the property, and from contesting the right of others to levy upon it. The property having been delivered upon the day of sale, there was then a trial of the right thereto by a jury, whose verdict was in favor of the appellee; whereupon the appellants, White, Mayers and Wheeler, together with one Chilton, executed a bond of indemnity to the sheriff to save him harmless, and thereupon the said sheriff proceeded to sell the same. The appellee, at the time,' being present and again claiming the property, forbid the sale, which was, nevertheless, made by the sheriff.
Two grounds for reversal are urged.
1st. That the finding, as against Hanty and Yandever, two of the appellants, was erroneous.
2d. That the appellee was estopped, by the recitals in the condition of the delivery bond, from setting up a title to the property.'
We think it clear that there is nothing in the first objection. These very parties, Hanly and Yandever, solemnly conceded, in their joint plea with the defendants below, that they, together with White, Wheeler, and Mayers, other defendants below, purchased the property at the sheriff’s sale, and carried the same away and converted it to their own use.
The other objection, we think, is also untenable. No plausible reason has been offered to sustain the idea that the appellee ought to be estopped by the recitals in the delivery bond, under the circumstances of this case, and we can conceive of none; and certainly none of the authorities cited to the point come up to the facts of this case. If this proceeding was upon the delivery bond, or was to vindicate, or defend some right predicated upon, or growing out of it, then most of them would be in support of the objection urged. But this is not the case here. The condition of the defendants has been in no way superinduced, or in any way affected by the matter that they seek to set up as an estoppel against the appellee. The very instrument itself, in which the matter was contained, has performed its office, and in legal contemplation does not exist at all, unless as the root of something that has grown up from it. And, certainly, as to these appellants nothing has been shown to exist as the result of it in any way, that has to any extent influenced their conduct in the premises.
It was decided in Virginia, in the case of Syme et al. vs. Montigue (4 Hen. & Munf., p. 180,) that it was no ground for relieving in equity either principal or security in a forthcoming bond,that the principal was not the owner of the property, or had only a specified interest therein; and upon this very ground of estoppel. And the same doctrine has been since recognized and applied in the courts of some of the other States. In the case of Jamison vs. Cozens, (3 Ala. R.), where the Alabama Court did so, Judge Ormond, in delivering the opinion of the Court, when speaking of this Virginia case, uses the following language: “ The reason for the decision, and it seems to me to be conclusive, is, that the obligors in the bond are estopped, so long as it remains in Jorce, from setting up an adversary title in another.”
The obligors are not to bo relieved from their own bond on any such ground; because, in its execution, they have solemnly admitted the contrary; and it would be, in effect, to repudiate its validity. But when the obligation of their bond has been fully complied with, the reason no longer exists. In such case, in the language of Judge Ormond, in the same case, “ the property then stands in the hands of the sheriff in the precise condition that it was in, when his possession was divested by the execution of the bond.” If this be so, and doubtless it is, who can claim that he has been injured? So far as the sheriff is concerned, he has been benefited rather than injured, because if he had kept the property delivered in satisfaction of the bond, and it should have been ultimately found not to be the property of the defendant in the execution, he would have been liable to rents and profits in addition to its value, instead of the latter only. And the same may be said of the plaintiff in the execution. So, the parties who may volunteer in the trespass by entering into the indemnifying bond, and the purchasers at the sheriff’s sale can set up no claim to have been injured, or in any way affected, because, up to this point, none of them have entered in the drama. When they do so, however, so far* from having any pretence that they were influenced in their course, by the claimant’s admission that the property belongs to the defendant in the execution, the very opposite is the truth, and they go into the matter with their eyes open. Where, then, is there any ground upon which they can set their feet as a point of complaint? We fancy they can have none.
This doctrine of estoppel, as old as the law itself, and ramifying throughout its body to an extent perhaps fully as great as any one doctrine, is no senseless and unreasonable rale, but is rather a spirit of equity; and is really odious, as it is often said to be, only when applied without the support of sound legal reason.
Finding no error in the record we shall affirm the judgment.