delivered the opinion of the Court.
Without going into a consideration of all the grounds taken in the brief, we are of opinion that the motion must be granted on the first, viz; that the deputy, who made the levy, was one of the plaintiffs in the execution. The law wisely foreseeing that the ministers of justice should be freed, as far as practicable, from all the improper bias which may result from self interest, has declared, that no man shall be his own officer, and that no one shall in his own person, and by hís own hand, do himself right by legal process. Therefore, when the officer is interested, it declares, that another shall act; and this, in principle, applies to all, though to some with greater, to others with less force.,
A distinction has been attempted, as to the nature of the process, and the degree of interest; but I am inclined to support the broad ground, as the safest, and to say, that no officer, who
I am aware' that it is said in some of the old cases, five or six hundred years ago, that.it was doubted, whether a sheriff could serve a writ in which he was interested; but these doubts, I think, must, always have been unfounded. The common law has been eulogized as a system of reason and justice, adapted to the exigences of society. Now S ask, whether a proposition can be stated, which would be more universally concurred in, than that no officer should be permitted to act in his own case. I know of none, which 1 think should be more general in its application, Í would say, from a conslable to the President of the United Mates. At this very sitting we set aside a renunciation 0f dower, because the justice of the quorum, by whom it was taken, was interested in the transaction, although for his children merely, and not for himself. And in the case of May v. Walters, from Colleton District, decided in May, 1823, 2 M‘C. 470, it was held, that the service of a writ by the deputy of the plaintiff, who was sheriff, was void; in which all the Judges present concurred, except Mr. Justice Gantt, who dissented on the ground, that the sheriff was only the nominal
Motion granted.
