28 Mo. App. 287 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action on the sheriff’s official bond to recover damages caused by his false return on a writ of attachment. The facts are substantially nncontroverted. One Henry Frank, a merchant, being in embarrassed circumstances, and subjecting himself to proceedings by attachment, the Fourth National Bank of this city sued out a writ of attachment against him, and caví sed the same to be placed in the hands of the sheriff for service, November 21, 1885. Shortly thereafter, and on the same day, the plaintiffs also sued out a writ of
The sheriff made the following return on the writ of attachment sued out by plaintiffs and executed by deputy Fitzwilliams:
"Executed this writ in the city of St. Louis this twenty-first day of November, 1885, at 10:53 a. m., cotemporaneous with attachment No. 402, circuit court, to December term, 1885, but subject thereto, by levying upon, seizing, and taking into my custody, as property of defendant, at No. 702 7th street, the following described personal property, viz: Fixtures, desks, tables, stoves, coats, pants, and vests, linings, buckles, buttons, thread, piece goods, cut lining, and clothing, and other miscellaneous goods and articles.”
"Further executed this writ in the city of St. Louis this twenty-first day of November, 1885, at 1:15 p. m.,
It is conceded that the attachment in favor of the Fourth National Bank exhausted the property and that plaintiffs realized nothing on their attachment; that if plaintiffs’ attachment is entitled to priority they were deprived of that priority by the sheriff’s return, and as the amount realized from the goods attached would have been, if applied to their claim, sufficient to pay it, that they have a valid cause of action in that event against the sheriff for the whole amount of their claim, provided his return is false.
Upon this evidence the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for defendants, which they did. The only question presented by this appeal is whether such instruction was warranted.
It is conceded upon the argument by appellants that it was the duty of the sheriff to levy the writ of attachment which first came to his hands, first. They claim, however, that the evidence tends to show that the sheriff failed to comply with that duty and lévied the writ in their favor first; that by the levy thus made they acquired a prior lien, which the sheriff, by making a return contrary to the facts, rendered ineffectual, and by thus depriving them of the benefit óf their lien rendered himself and his sureties liable as upon a false return.
The following propositions applicable to the facts have been adjudicated here and elsewhere: That nothing short of an actual attachment of the goods can create a lien, and that the attachment can be made only by some act of the officer serving the writ, which in legal contemplation is equivalent to the actual possession and custody of the property. Gate v. Bushnell, 9 Conn. 530, 535. That an officer cannot make a valid levy by standiug before a locked door of a store and declaring a
Our statute provides that, where the same property is attached in several actions by different plaintiffs against the same defendant, the court may settle and determine the controversies which may arise between any of the-plaintiffs in relation to the property, and the priority, validity, good faith, force and effect of the different attachments, or may dissolve any attachment partially or wholly, or postpone it to another, or make such order-in the premises as right and justice may require. Gen. Stat., 1879, sec. 447. It has been held under this statute that where an officer neglects these provisions and decides the question himself he does so at, his own peril. Howard v. Clark, 43 Mo. 349; Metzner v. Graham, 57 Mo. 411. This, however, was in cases where the determination of the sheriff was erroneous, and where it was apparent that the court would, or ought to have, come to a different conclusion if appealed to under the statute.
Applying the law, as thus found, to the facts of this-particular case and the following result is ajiparent: There was evidence tending to show that the writ of plaintiffs was first levied, and that, therefore, the return.
But it by no means follows that, even if all these facts are true, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover substantial damages.
We must deny the proposition that the plaintiffs would have acquired a valid first lien on the goods, even if the sheriff had made a different return. On the contrary, we are clear that their lien, under the conceded facts of the case, would have been subordinate to that of the Fourth National Bank, and that it would have been the duty of the court so to declare, if its attention had been called to the facts, under the provisions of the statute hereinabove recited.
The two writs, in contemplation of law, were delivered to the same officer, although delivered to different deputies, and it was his duty to serve the first writ first. He was engaged in the performance of that duty, intending so to serve the writ, and using all reasonable diligence for that purpose. There was no superior diligence on part of plaintiffs in discovering goods, or in any other manner, which would give them superior rights. There was a superior alacrity on part of one deputy of the same officer, in jumping through the window and making a declaration, an alacrity which, under the particular facts of the case, is not to be commended. If the court’s attention had been called to these facts, by motion, it would have been its duty to
The identical proposition was passed upon in Kennon v. Ficklin (6 B. Mon. 415), where the court says : “While it is conceded that in the case of distinct officers, the first levy gives the prior lien, yet in the case of the same officer, in the discharge of impartial justice between litigants, it is his duty, and that of his deputies, to levy that first which first came to his or their hands; and if his deputy levies the junior execution first, it is his duty, upon being apprised of the fact, to pay the money to the plaintiff in the senior execution, as was determined by this court in the case of Million v. Commonwealth for the use of Withers (1 B. Monroe, 810). Though there is not a perfect analogy between the execution of original process or process of attachment, and the levy of an execution, as the office of sheriff is one, and his deputies his own agents, it is his duty, in the discharge of impartial justice between litigants, to execute, and require his deputies to execute, all process in the order in which it comes to the hands of either. And the statute, with a view to preserve the time, requires the sheriff to endorse on the process the time of its reception.”
It results that, under the conceded facts in this case, the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover substantial damages, and as no useful purpose can be subserved by remanding the case, the judgment will be reversed and judgment entered in this court in favor of plaintiffs for one cent damages and costs. It is so ordered.