39 Miss. 338 | Miss. | 1860
delivered the opinion of the court:
The defendant in error, as the claimant of certain property levied upon by the execution of tbe plaintiff in error, made affidavit and entered into bond, for tbe trial of tbe right of property, as required by statute. Tbe execution was returnable to tbe December term (1859) of tbe Circuit Court of De Soto county; but tbe execution was not returned, and tbe affidavit and bond filed, by tbe sheriff, until tbe 10th of December,' on which day tbe court adjourned, in consequence of which no issue was made up and tendered by tbe plaintiff in execution at that term. On tbe 10th of February, 1860, in vacation, tbe plaintiff in tbe execution filed bis plea traversing tbe affidavit and tendering tbe proper issue. At tbe succeeding term of tbe court tbe claimant > entered her motion to dismiss tbe cause, because tbe issue, required in such cases by tbe statute, bad not been made up at tbe term of tbe court to which tbe execution was returnable; which motion was sustained, and a judgment entered discharging tbe claimant from her bond. This action of tbe court is tbe subject of tbe only exception material to be noticed.
Tbe statute directs that, where personal property, levied on by virtue of an execution, is claimed by a person not a party to tbe execution, such person may make oath or affirmation to bis right and title to tbe property so levied on, and may enter into bond properly conditioned; and that, “ upon tbe making of such affidavit and bond, tbe sheriff, or other officer bolding tbe execution, shall receive tbe same, and shall deliver said property to tbe claimant, and shall return said affidavit and bond; and tbe court shall thereupon direct an issue to be made up between tbe parties, to try tbe right of property, before a jury at tbe
And, further, that “ if, by default of the plaintiff in execution, an issue for the trial of the right of property so levied on and claimed be not made up at the term to which such execution is made returnable, the court shall discharge the 'claimant from his bond, &c.; but if, from the default of the claimant, such issue shall not be made up at the first term of said court, said court shall cause a jury to be empanelled, at the instance of the plaintiff in execution, ánd sworn to execute a writ of inquiry as to the value of the property claimed by said claimant,” &c. Code, 533, Art. 297.
Under these provisions it was doubtless the duty of the sheriff to return the execution, with the bond and affidavit, at the commencement of the return-term of the execution. It was a manifest -violation of duty in the sheriff to delay making a return of the execution, and filing the affidavit and bond, until the last day of the term. But the question here primarily to be considered is not, whether the sheriff failed to perform his duty in this respect, but whether under these circumstances the plaintiff in the execution was in default in not having made up and tendered the issue. For if, by his default, the issue was not made up, the judgment of the court was unquestionably correct.
In cases where personal property, levied on by virtue of an execution, is claimed by a third party before an issue for the trial of the right of property can be made up, the execution, with the bond and affidavit of the claimant, must be returned and filed in court. Upon this being done the statute makes it the duty of the court to direct that the- proper issue shall be made up between the parties. But it has never been the practice, nor has it been made, by law, the duty of the court, of its own motion, to require the sheriff in such case, to return the execution, affidavit and bond. The statute, very plainly, imposes the duty of diligence upon the parties to proceedings of this character. And as the simple neglect or failure of the officer holding the execution to return it in due time with the bond and affidavit of the claimant cannot have the effect to discharge either party from that duty, on whom is devolved the
■In these cases, where the subject of the levy is claimed by a third party, the onus of proving that the property levied on is subject to sale in satisfaction of the execution lies upon the plaintiff in the execution. It is hence his duty to tender the issue to be tried between himself and the' claimant. And if, by the default of the claimant, the. issue is not made up at the return-term, he thereby renounces his claim, and the plaintiff in the execution is entitled to a jury of inquiry to assess the value of the property levied upon. But as the claimant of the property has no control over, or interest in, the execution which devolves upon him an obligation to look after it, in the hands of the sheriff^ it seems clear that he is not chargeable with default, before the plaintiff in execution has made up the pleadings and tendered the issue.
The plaintiff in execution occupies a very different attitude from that of the claimant of the property. He has, to a certain extent, control of the execution. It is his obvious interest to look after it and see that the sheriff does his duty. In this case the legal presumption existed that the plaintiff in execution knew that the execution, affidavit and bond were returned and filed in court the day on which it adjourned. And as, in respect of the rights of the claimant of the property levied, he was bound to diligence, it is also to be presumed that he had notice of the claim set up to the property which had been levied upon, and that a bond had been given pursuant to the provisions of the statute. It was, hence, his duty to enter his motion -to compel the sheriff to return the execution and bond, so that the proper issue might be made up in time for a trial at the return-term. Having omitted to do this, the failure of the sheriff to perform his duty affords him no sufficieflt excuse. He was clearly in default, and by such default the issue was not made up. at the return of the execution, which is imperatively required by the statute.
Judgment affirmed.
A reargument was asked for, but refused.