11 Barb. 541 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851
By the Court,
It was assumed upon the trial, by the counsel for both parties, that upon the trial of the replevin suit, the title to the property in question had been found to be in the defendants in that suit, and that they had recovered judgment therefor. If, as it was alledged and not denied upon the trial, the defendants, upon the trial of the replevin suit, recovered judgment for the value of the property, and have collected that judgment, such judgment and satisfaction, by operation of law, transferred the title to the property to the plaintiff. It is upon the principle that solutio pretii emptionis loco habetur. (2 Kent, 387, and cases there cited.) Assuming the fact to be that the defendants had been satisfied for the value of the property, I do not see why the defendants in this action were not estopped from disputing the plaintiff’s title. But, as this fact seems rather to have been assumed than admitted, it may be proper to examine the case without reference to the result of the replevin suit.
The return of a ministerial officer, upon returnable process, stating his official doings in the execution of that process, is prima facie evidence of the facts stated therein; even in an action between third persons, and where those facts come collat
As between the parties to the process and their privies, the return is, with some exceptions, conclusive evidence. In the replevin suit neither party would be at liberty to question the caption and delivery of the property as stated in the return. If false, direct proceedings might have been taken to correct it, or an action might have been sustained by the party injured by its falsity. But in that action the parties were bound by the facts stated, so far as they related to official acts. Thus, the return was conclusive evidence that the property had been delivered to the plaintiff, so that the defendants, if they succeeded in the action, would be entitled, as a matter of right, to a judgment for the return of the property, or, if they elected, for its value. The return being thus conclusive against the plaintiff, ought, in justice, to be equally conclusive in his favor. If he is made liable for the property in consequence of the delivery proved by the return, the same evidence ought to be conclusive in his favor, against the same parties, or their privies. Nothing could be more unjust than to allow the defendants in the replevin suit, after they have recovered the property, or its value, on the ground that the sheriff had delivered it to the plaintiff, to defeat this action by impeaching the return upon which they had so recovered. No rule of evidence, properly applied, can produce such a result. The defendant Gray was a party to the replevin suit. It does not appear that the other defendant had or claimed any interest in the property. Under these circumstances, I think the return should be regarded as conclusive evidence between the parties to this suit. (See Baker v. McDuffie, 23 Wend. 289.)
But let it be assumed that the evidence to show that the bond
Harris, Parker and Wright, Justices.]
How it happened that more than a month elapsed before the property was delivered by the sheriff, does not appear. If it was the fault of the sheriff he undoubtedly rendered himself liable for any damages incurred by the delay. It was his duty to determine, at least within a reasonable time after the decision of the jury upon the claim, to which of the parties he would deliver the property. But until such delivery the property was in the custody of the law, and if the defendants in the replevin suit proceeded to sell it upon execution, that sale was illegal. I am of opinion that the motion to set aside the nonsuit should be granted.