23 N.C. 88 | N.C. | 1840
In bringing trover, the plaintiff affirms the property to be in him, by virtue of the attachment. He puts his case, therefore, on the same footing as if the horse had been taken under a fieri facias; and, therefore, it may be assumed that he is right. At all events, a sheriff derives, under an attachment, no better right in the defendant's property than he would under a fi. fa. How, then, would it stand if these seizures had been upon executions, instead of attachments?
On that point our opinion is, decidedly, that a sheriff who, after seizing goods, leaves them on the premises of the debtor, not separated from the other goods of the debtor, and for the use of the debtor or his family as before the seizure, does thereby prima facie lose his property in them, upon the grounds of presumptive fraud or abandonment, unless the delay to remove them be but for a reasonable time, and then be accounted for by the state of the property — as, for example, that it was a growing crop, or an article in the course of being manufactured, or the like. *74
We believe the decisions on the point in our own country are not uniform. But in England the doctrine seems settled; and, as far as we are apprised, that doctrine has prevailed in this State. If the creditor himself direct the sheriff not to seize property, or, after seizing, not to remove or sell it, and then another creditor deliver his execution, the sheriff may and ought to satisfy the latter. The conduct of the former creditor is deemed fraudulent; and, therefore, he is postponed, (91) and is deprived of any remedy against the sheriff, who only obeyed instructions. Rice v. Sarjeant, 7 Mod., 37; Bradley v.Wyndham, 1 Wils., 44; Edwards v. Harbin, 2 Term, 596; Palmer v.Clarke,
If this be so in England, there is yet more reason for adhering closely to the rule in this State. With us, process of execution is issued from so many different tribunals, Federal and State, and it is confided to so many different and independent officers as to make it highly expedient, with a view to the interests of creditors and the safety of officers, that we should not put this question upon nice distinctions, but upon some broad general principle, intelligible to officers and conducive to the healthy administration of justice, though in some few cases it may be productive of some hardships or inconveniences. The rule can only be called into operation in the cases of insolvent defendants; and in such cases it is better for all parties the true state of things should be known at once. The true principle, therefore, as we think, is that the property of a debtor, as against his creditors, ought not, by operation of law, to be divested vested in the sheriff but by some acts as obvious and notorious as the nature and state of the property will permit. That, in the case of ordinary personal chattels like the present, is effected by taking and keeping possession, and by that only; and, therefore, it is required. In thus speaking, we consider that we are only repeating what has ever been deemed to be law in this State; for we believe the custom has been uniform either to remove the goods at once or in some way to take them out of the debtor's disposal and use; or, instead of leaving a bailiff in charge, to take a forthcoming bond, as permitted (93) by the act of 1807. (1 Rev. Stat., ch. 45, sec. 17.) That act, however, does not authorize the goods to be left on the premises and keep them bound as against other executions; for it merely allows the sheriff to obtain that indemnity for himself, without changing his responsibility. He is not obliged to take the bond; and if he takes it and leaves the property, he does so at the risk of the surety in the forthcoming bond; and, in case of his failure, at his own risk; unless, indeed, the surety procure the sheriff to leave him (the surety) or some one else as the sheriff's deputy in charge of the goods. Denson v. Sledge,
Sharpe's knowledge of the sheriff's seizure cannot have any effect; for he knew also of its abandonment; and he was therefore bound to take it on the process in his hands.
Wherefore we deem the judgment erroneous, and direct a
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
Cited: Wilson v. Hensley,
(94)