36 N.C. 229 | N.C. | 1840
The plaintiff, being sheriff of Lincoln county, received a writ of fieri facias for $2,498:23, with interest and costs, recovered by the defendant Green against the defendant Johnson, as administrator of Timothy Chandler deceased. The plaintiff placed the execution in the hands of one Maury, one of his deputies, who seized under it two slaves, which were found in the possession of the defendant Morris; and also six other slaves, and some cattle and household furniture, which were found in the possession, of the defendant Elizabeth Chandler. The seizure was made by the direction of the creditor Green, who pointed out the slaves and other articles to the deputy sheriff, as property be-r longing to the estate of Timothy Chandler, derived from Er lizabeth Chandler by their intermarriage and his subsequent
To this bill the defendants Green and Johnson, administrator, demurred; and the other defendants put in answers, setting forth the nature of their respective claims, and submitting to interplead with the other parties. But when the cause came on to be argued on the demurrer, between the plaintiff and the two defendants, who had put it in, the Judge of the Court of Equity was of opinion, that the case was not
In support of the bill, the counsel for the plaintiff has been unable to adduce the authority of any adjudication. His only reliance is a dictum of Lord Mansfield, in Cooper vs. Sheriff of London, 1 Bur. 37; in which he mentions a bill filed in Chancery by the sheriff, in a case of disputed property, ns one of the modes in which a sheriff may be relieved from danger or indemnified from loss. That, however, could not be a question in that cause; and, indeed, the doctrine belonged to another jurisdiction, and, therefore, although laid down by an eminent Judge, is not authority. We are saved the necessity of discussing the question on elementary principles, by haying a case in equity deciding it in opposition to that opinion of Lord Mansfield. Slingshy vs. Boulton, 1 Ves. & Bea. 334, was a bill of interpleader by a sheriff, similar to the present; and, on the motion for an injunction, Lord Eldon enquired for an instance of such a bill by a sheriff, and, none being cited, he declared the sheriff to be concluded from stating a case of interpleader, because in such a bill the plaintiff always admits a title against himself in all the defendants. He said, a person cannot file such a bill, who is obliged to state, that as to some of the defendants the plaintiff is a wrong doer.
If, in this case, the property was in the plaintiffs in the actions that have been brought at law, the sheriff was a trespasser in seizing it,, and he did it upon the responsibility of answering for the act as a trespass. Against that risk he should have provided, by taking a bond of indemnity from the execution creditor. He cannot escape from- responsibility by turning over the owners of the property on the creditor. On the other hand, if the property was really subject to the debt, it was properly seized, and the creditor is entitled to have it sold, notwithstanding unfouhded actions or claims by third person's'. The sheriff, having thus made himself liable to one or other of the parties, by misfeazanceornonfeazance, is not a mere stake-holder, but his interest is directly involv
The decree must therefore stand affirmed and with costs in both Courts.
Per Curiam. Decree accordingly.