17 Ala. 280 | Ala. | 1850
An execution issued in favor of the plaintiff against James G. Carroll, and was placed in the hands of the sheriff of T uscaloosa county, who levied it on the slave in controversy, which was then in the possession of Carroll. After the levy was made, the sheriff entertaining doubts whether the slave was liable to be sold under the execution, demanded of the plaintiff a bond of indemnity to protect him against the
The lien created on the goods of the defendant by the delivery of an execution to- the sheriff does not give the plaintiff a title to the property hound by the lien, but simply a right to subject the property to the satisfaction, of his debt. When this right to have the property sold is taken away or suspended, one who purchases the goods bona fide, during the suspension or destruction of the lien, obtains a title that must be prefered to the lien of the execution, although it be afterwards revived. This is the conclusion we attained in the case of The Branch Bank v. Ford, 13 Ala. 431. In that case an execution had been received by the sheriff’, and was returned satisfied by mistake of the plaintiff’s attorney. Another one was subsequently issued, but in the interim between the return of the former and the issuance of the latter, the defendant sold a slave to Ford. The court held that the title of Ford was superior to the lien of the execution. So, too, it is well established by the decisions of this court, that the lien of a judgment on the lands of the defendant results from the right to issue an execution on the judgment, and any thing that takes away this right is a destruction of the lien. — Burks, adm. v. Jones & Allen, 13 Ala. 167. It is then only necessary to ascertain whether the right of the plaintiff to subject the slave to the satisfaction of his execution was suspended at the time the defendant purchased. When a sheriff has levied an execution on personal property, and doubts shall afterwards arise whether the right of the property is in the debtor, the sheriff may apply to the plaintiff for a bond and .security to indemnify him, against the sale of the property, which