220 Mo. 213 | Mo. | 1909
This is an action to set aside a sheriff’s deed, made March 30, 1901, conveying to defendant a small parcel of land in Douglas county, Missouri. The levy and sale were made by virtue of a transcript execution issued out of the circuit court of Douglas county on March 6, 1901, based upon a justice’s transcript of a judgment by default rendered by him against the plaintiff in this suit on December 2, 1899, and filed in said circuit court on June 27, 1900, upon which judgment the justice issued an execution December 2,1899, returnable in ninety days. Upon this execution the constable made the following return: “I hereby certify that I served within execution Dec. 8th, 1899. For serving execution, $.50.” Underneath this, in pencil, was the following: “Now on this 1st day of March, 1900, this execution is by me returned not satisfied, for the reason that no property belonging to the deft, could be found subject to execution. J. D. Hart
The court found the issues for the defendant, and rendered judgment against plaintiff for costs. Plaintiff appeals.
The statute (Sec. 4034, R. S. 1899) provides that an execution issued by a justice of the peace shall be directed, except where it is otherwise specially provided, to the constable of the township where the justice resides, and it shall run against the goods and chattels of the person against whom it is issued, and be dated on the day it is issued and be returnable in ninety days from its date.
Sections 4018 and 4019 confer the right upon the person in whose favor the judgment may be to take and file a transcript of the judgment in the office of the clerk of the circuit court, which judgment from the time of filing the transcript becomes a lien upon the real estate of the defendant in the county, as a judgment of the circuit court, but the statute (sec. 4019) provides that “no execution shall be sued out of the court where the transcript is filed, if the defendant is a resident of the county, until an execution shall have been issued by the justice, directed to the constable of the township in which the defendant resides, . . . . and returned that the defendant had no goods or chattels whereof to levy the same.”
This being a direct attack upon the validity of the sheriff’s sale, it may be set aside for irregularity in the proceedings had prior thereto, including the premature return of the execution by the constable, if it was premature. It is well settled that an execution issued by a justice of the peace should not be returned before the time fixed by .law, and if it should be it is irregular and invalid.
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.