This is an action instituted by appellant against R. B. Gore and the sureties on his official bond as constable to recover the value of a bale of cotton alleged to be the property of the plaintiff. It is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff had instituted an action in replevin before a justice of the peace against one Harris for the recovery of a bale of cotton, and had caused an order of delivery to be issued in due form and delivered to the constable. The complaint then proceeds as follows:
“That, in the execution of said order of delivery, the said R. B. Gore, as constable aforesaid, located and seized said bale of cotton, and thereafter negligently and carelessly permitted the same to be taken from his custody as such constable and removed and concealed, so that the same could not be and was by said constable not delivered to the plaintiff, as required by law. That, by reason of said negligent conduct of said constable, the said cotton was lost to plaintiff, and it was deprived of the value thereof, to its damage in the sum of $45, the value of said cotton, and the further sum of $10 costs and other expenses incurred.”
The court sustained a demurrer to this complaint, and the plaintiff appealed.
It will 'be observed that the complaint contains no allegation to the effect that the plaintiff in the original suit had given bond in accordance with t'he statute for the delivery of the property in controversy. And it is urged that the complaint was defective in this respect. We think that position is well taken. The statute (sec. 6857, Kirby’s Digest) provides that “the order shall not be complied with by the sheriff until there has been executed in his presence by one or more sufficient sureties of the plaintiff a bond to the defendant to the effect that the plaintiff shall duly prosecute the action, and that he shall perform the judgment of the court,” etc. A plaintiff in a replevin suit has no right, therefore, to demand execution of an order of delivery, or, even where the officer has taken the property in his possession, to demand a delivery of it to him without having given the bond prescribed by law. This court in State v. Stephens,
It is said that the complaint, by stating that the constable failed to deliver the property to the plaintiff “as required by law,”, inferentially alleged that the law had been complied with, and that -this constituted a defective statement of the cause of action, which should have been met by a motion to make more definite, and not by demurrer. We do not think that this, allegation can be -construed to be in effect a statement that the plaintiff had given bond. To say that the constable had failed to deliver the property as required by law was merely a statement of a legal conclusion, and not of a fact. This statement therefore did not aid the complaint.
The complaint is defective also in failing to state that the original action has been prosecuted to a final judgment. Personal property taken by an officer .under an order of delivery becomes from that moment in custodia le gis. Hearn v. Ayres,
Affirmed.
