38 Vt. 278 | Vt. | 1865
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action is ejectment for lot No. 49 in Newark. The plaintiff claims title by virtue of an attachment and levy of an execution in his favor against Daniel Whipple. It appeared on trial thiit Daniel Whipple, at the time of the plaintiff’s attachment and levy, owned the lot, unless the defendant acquired title to it by virtue of a vendue deed from the collector of taxes of Newark. The court having decided the defendant’s title invalid, and the exception to that ruling not being insisted on here, the question is as to the validity of the plaintiff’s levy as against the defendant.
The defendant objected to the record of the levy introduced by the plaintiff, on the ground that it appeared that the execution misdescribed the judgment on which it issued in respect to the amount. The judgment is a judgment by confession before D. Bowker, justice of the peace, entered upon a writ which the plaintiff had caused to be’ issued and served on the execution debtor. The record states that “ Daniel Whipple confessed himself indebted to Ezra W. Perry on a note,” (describing it,) “in the sum of $219.09 debt and $5.76 costs of this process, whereupon it is adjudged by said justice that the said Perry recover of the said Daniel Whipple the said sum of $219.09 debt and $5.76 costs, and twenty-five cents more for taking and recording said confession, whereof the said Perry may have execution.” The record of the execution introduced by the plaintiff, as well as the original execution given in evidence ,by the defendant, shows that the execution recites the judgment correctly as to the amount of debt or damages and costs, except that it omits entirely the twenty five cents for taking and recording the confession. For this variance between the judgment and execution the defendant’s counsel insist the execution and levy are void.
The only remaining objection to the levy is that the execution was void because signed by Charles S. Dana, justice of the peace, he having no authority to sign the execution in that capacity. The judgment having been rendered by Daniel Bowker, justice of the peace, and he having died before the execution issued, the county clerk had authority by statute to issue the execution, but a justice of the peace had no such authority, Dana was in fact county clerk at
Prima facie such a levy must be regarded as void, as no such execution could lawfully issue. If an execution returnable in sixty days when it should be one hundred and twenty days, is void, so that even the officer executing it cannot justify under it, as is decided in Bond v. Wilder, 16 Vt. 393, and again in Fifield v. Richardson, 34 Vt. 410, it is impossible to sustain a levy under the execution in question, provided the evidence offered by the defendant to show-how the execution was signed is admissible.
By the record of the execution and levy from the county clerk’s office, introduced by the plaintiff, the execution purports to be signed “ Charles 8. Dana, county clerk.” The defendant offered the original execution and levy thereon to show that the execution is signed Charles S. Dana, justice peace, and not by him as county clerk, and it so appears by the original execution which the officer levied. The plaintiff objected to this on the ground that the record of the execution and levy was conclusive that the execution was signed as the record he had introduced indicated. This objection cannot prevail. It is indispensable to the validity of a levy on real estate, that the execution and levy be recorded in the town clerk’s office and in the office from whence it issued. These are acts which the creditor must procure to be done to perfect his title under the levy. A copy
It is further insisted by the plaintiff’s counsel that as the defendant is in possession without title, and not a party to the judgment and levy, he is not at liberty to make these objections to the levy. But in ejectment the plaintiff who has no prior possession to aid him, must show title in himself, even against one in possession without title, unless he can show that the defendant is in under him. Such is the condition of these parties. The plaintiff’s levy being so defective as to render it void, the defendant has a right to insist on the defect in the plaintiff’s title ; the same right that the plaintiff has to insist on the invalidity of the defendant’s vendue title under which the defendant claims. There are undoubtedly some objections to a levy that do not render it void, but only voidable at the election of the execution debtor, under some appropriate proceeding brought to vacate it, In such case the levy cannot be attacked collaterally by a
Judgment reversed -and new trial granted.