Russell v. Lawton

14 Wis. 202 | Wis. | 1861

By the Court,

Cole, J.

It is very clear that this action is one sounding in tort, and that it cannot be maintained unless the appellant, or his deputy Wright, was guilty of some neglect of duty for which the law holds the sheriff liable. Do the facts show this to be the case ? Those facts are few and undisputed, and are in substance as follows:

On the 9th day of February, 1859, the appellant, as sheriff of Rock county, had delivered to him an execution in favor of the Bank of Beloit against the Racine & Mississippi Railroad company, and by direction of the judgment creditors, levied the same upon eleven hundred and ten dollars coin, the money of the railroad company, and paid it over as money made upon the execution. On the preceding 4th day of February, an execution in favor of the respondent and against the same defendants was delivered to Sydney Wright, a deputy of the appellant, which was returned unsatisfied for the reason that the officer could find no property upon which to levy. The respondent has brought this action to recover the amount of the execution delivered to Wright, insisting that because it was jplaced in the hands of the deputy before the junior execution was delivered to the sheriff, it should first be satisfied, and that the sheriff was guilty of misconduct in not thus applying the money that came to his hands, instead of paying it over to the bank. At the same time it is conceded that the sheriff acted in perfect good faith in the matter, and that when he levied upon and paid over the money to the bank, he had no notice whatever that his deputy held any execution against the same debtor. In view of these facts, upon what principle is it sought to charge the appellant in this action ? It is this. A delivery of an ex-*207edition to a deputy sheriff is said in legal effect to be a de-' livery to the sheriff himself, since, in contemplation of all the deputies of the sheriff are but one officer, being all servants of the same master, and that therefore the sheriff must be held chargeable with constructive notice of the prior execution in the hands of his deputy. And upon this fiction of the law the whole case hinges.

It is undoubtedly true that for many purposes a sheriff and his deputies are regarded as one officer, in the sense that an official act of the deputy is deemed the act of the sheriff, and the sheriff is held responsible for such act as his own, though he may have had no personal knowledge of the matter, and been individually guilty of no wrong. All pro-. cesses are directed to the sheriff as such, who is required to do the thing therein commanded to be done; and the sheriff is responsible to the world for all breaches of duty or official misconduct on the part of any of his deputies. For this reason an action for a breach of duty of the office of sheriff must be brought against the high sheriff, though the breach was by the default of the under sheriff. Cameron vs. Reynolds, 1 Cowper, 403. In this sense the sheriff and his deputies may be said to constitute one officer. But still the deputies of a sheriff, in relation to each other, must often be considered as several officers, with distinct rights and acting with distinct liabilities. Odiorne vs. Colley, 2 N. H., 66; Vinton vs. Bradford, 13 Mass., 114; Thompson vs. Marsh, 14 id., 269; Bagley vs. White, 4 Pick., 395. The maxim, then, that a sheriff and his deputies constitute but one person, has received qualification in various cases which have come before the courts. Philosophically speaking, of course, the maxim has no truth or foundation whatever. The legal identity of the sheriff and his deputies is maintained for the plain and obvious purpose to render the sheriff, in a civil action, liable for the official acts of his deputies -as if they were his own acts. But to say that whatever comes to the possession of one or all the deputies comes to the possession of the sheriff, and that he is chargeable with noticemf all which comes to the knowledge of any and all his deputies, is a proposition of law which, we think, cannot be maintained. And the *208fallacy of tbe proposition cannot, perhaps, better be illustrated. than by applying it to the circumstances and facts of this case. It is not pretended that the deputy, Wright, was guilty of any neglect of duty in not seizing under his execution the coin belonging to the railroad company. If he could have found this coin, he was expressly authorized by our statute to levy upon it and pay it over as so much money collected upon the execution. Section 19, chap. 184, R. S., 1858. But it does not appear that by the exercise of any degree of diligence he could have found the coin. So the deputy has not been guilty of any default or misconduct, and if this action is maintained, it is very obvious the sheriff can have no action over against his deputy.

But to bring to a closer test the proposition that a sheriff and all his deputies must be considered as one person, and that the sheriff must be chargeable with notice of all matters which come to the possession or knowledge of such deputies, take a case suggested on the argument, and which will occur to any one reflecting on the subject. An execution against A is put into the hands of a deputy who knows of no property belonging to A to satisfy the same. Another deputy has information of property possessed by A sufficient to satisfy the execution, but has no knowledge that an execution is out against him. The sheriff has no knowledge of any execution against A, or of any property belonging to him. Under these circumstances, is the sheriff to be charged with constructive notice of the execution in the hands of one deputy, and of the information possessed by the other in respect to property belonging to the debtor, and thus held liable for a breach of duty in not making the money on the execution which he never saw ? To contend for such a proposition would seem little else than the most glaring absurdity ; and yet we see no escape from such a result, if the maxim that the sheriff and his deputies are to be regarded as one person, is to be accepted without limitation. The only ground for saying that the sheriff is liable in this action, is that when he paid the money which he had collected on the junior execution, over to the bank, he must be chargeable with notice of the senior execution in the hands *209of bis deputy. It is admitted tbat he acted in the matter with entire good faith, and did not know that Wright held or had any execution against the railroad company in favor of the respondent. We think, under these circumstances, to hold him liable is to carry beyond the reason of the principle and into flagrant absurdities, the maxim that the sheriff and his deputies constitute but one person.” Whether the liability of the sheriff would have been changed, had he collected and paid over the coin to.the bank with actual knowledge of the prior execution in the hands of the deputy, we are not called upon to decide. At common law, it is well settled, the execution had relation to its teste, and hound the goods and chattels of the debtor from that date. This rule was changed by the statute of frauds, which declared that the execution should bind the property only from the time it was delivered to the sheriff to be executed. Smallcomb vs. Buckingham, 1 Comyn’s R., 35; Payne vs. Drew, 4 East, 523; Hotchkiss vs. McVickar, 12 Johns. R. 403; Lambert vs. Paulding, 18 id., 311; Marsh vs. Lawrence, 4 Cow., 461.

Probably in Kentucky the sheriff would be held to be in default for paying over money on a junior execution, knowing that a prior one was in the hands of his deputy. Million vs. Commonwealth, 1 B. Mon., 310; Ferguson vs. Williams, 3 id., 302. And when the money produced on the second execution happened to remain in ■ the hands of the sheriff when an application was made to the court for a rule directing to whom it should be paid, it\ has been ordered to be paid to the plaintiff in the first execution. Lambert vs. Paulding, supra. In New York, however, the execution is a lien upon the property of the judgment debtor from its delivery to the sheriff (Marsh vs. Lawrence, supra), wjiile our statute declares that “personal property shall be bound from the time it is seized on execution.” Sec. 18, chap. 134. Whether this statute does not materially change the law upon this subject, and postpone the lien upon the property until it is actually seized on the execution, may admit of grave doubt, If that be the effect of the statute, then even if the money had remained in the hands of the sheriff, when an applica*210tion was made to apply it on tbe execution in favor of tbe respondent, tbe court would not so bave applied it.

It follows from these views, that tbe judgment of tbe circuit court must be reversed, and a new trial ordered.