4 S.D. 58 | S.D. | 1893
The plaintiff in error was indicted by the grand jury of Deuel county for unlawfully and wilfully taking 1,150 bushels of oats and 200 bushels of barley from the custody of the sheriff of Deuel county, alleged to have been levied upon and in the custody of said sheriff under and by virtue of an execution in his hands in favor of the Quebec Bank, against John Carroll and others. A trial was had resulting in a verdict against the defendant, upon which he was sentenced to pay a fine, and he now brings the case to this court for review on writ of error.
The indictment was found under Section 6336 Comp. Laws, which reads as follows: “Every person who wilfully injures or destroys, takes or attempts to take, or assists any other person in taking or attempting to take, from the custody of any officer or person, any personal property which such officer or person has in charge under any process of law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The questions raised by the assignment of errors for our determination may be stated as follows: (1) Was the certified transcript of the docket entry of the judgment from the clerk’s
1. On the trial the state’s attorney gave in evidence a certified transcript of the judgment docket in the case of the Quebec Bank v. John Carroll and others, from the office of the clerk of courts of Hamlin county, and filed and docketed in the office of the clerk of courts of Deuel county. This was objected to, but upon what grounds is not stated in the abstract. If it was necessary to prove the existence of a legal judgment in the case, we think the transcript of the judgment docket was clearly insufficient to establish that fact. But we are of the opinion that the proof of a valid judgment was not necessary. It was essential, however, to prove that the sheriff of Deuel county levied upon, and had in his charge and custody, the property alleged to have been taken by the plaintiff in error, under process valid upon its face. Possibly, it was not only necessary to offer in evidence the execution, but to prove also that a transcript of the judgment docket had been filed in the office of the clerk of court of Deuel county, and docketed in thao county. But it is not necessary to decide that question at this time. Section 5114, Comp. Laws, provides that an execution may be issued to the sheriff of any county where the judgment is docketed; and Section 5104 provides that a judgment may be docketed in any other county upon filing with the clerk of the court of said county a transcript of the original docket. If proof of the filing of the transcript was necessary, the transcript of the judgment docket of Hamlin county was competent evidence, and was properly admitted as a link in the chain of evidence to proye that the sheriff had in his hands process valid
2. The state’s attorney also introducted in evidence the execution in the case of the Quebec Bank v. John Carroll and others, “which said execution was admitted in evidence over the objection of the plaintiff in error.” What the objection to its admission was does not appear in the abstract. In the brief, however, of the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error, it is insisted that the execution appears to have been issued in the name of the ‘‘Territory of Dakota,” instead of the name of the “State of South Dakota,” and an examination of the abstract shows such to be the fact. The venue of the execution, however, is “State of South Dakota, Hamlin County — ss.” As the territory of Dakota, as such, had ceased to exist when the execution was issued, — its territory being embraced in the two states of North and South Dakota, — we think the error was clearly clerical, and amendable, and did not render the execution void. Bean v. Loftus, 4 N. W. Rep. 334, 48 Wis. 371; Hibbard v. Smith, 50 Cal. 511.
3. It is further contended by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error that the property,- at the time it is claimed it was taken by the plaintiff in error, was not in the custody of the sheriff, as the same had never been properly levied on by the sheriff, or taken into his custody. The facts pertaining to this levy are stated in the abstract as follows: The evidence introduced by the state showing that, in undertaking to levy upon said property by virtue of said execution, the said sheriff, on December 26, 1890, went to section twenty-nine, in the township of Havana, in said Deuel county, where said property was situated, — the same being grain in the granary on said place; that he entered the upper story of the granary by pulling the staple and opening the door, — the same having been fastened
4. It is also contended by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the grain levied on by the sheriff was shown to be the property of one E. R. C. Clarkson, assignee of the defendant in the execution, and that the plaintiff in error, as the managing agent of said Clarkson, had the right to retake the property, as he did do, without committing a breach of the peace, and that he was not required to take legal proceedings to assert the right of his principal to the property. 'The court below instructed the jury upon this question that, though they might find that Clarkson owned the grain, the plaintiff in error would dot be justified in taking it from the sheriff as the agent of Clarkson. The court also refused an instruction on the part of the plaintiff in error asserting the opposite doctrine. In New York, and perhaps some other states, the doctrine contended for by the counsel for the plaintiff in error has been held. Hyatt v. Wood, 3 Johns, 239; Spencer v. McGowan, 13 Wend. 256; Shipman v. Clark, 4 Denio, 446. But in New Hampshire (State v. Richardson, 38 N. H. 208) the supreme court of that state has laid down a contrary rule. But, whatever the rule may have been at common law, we think the legislature of this state has, by the adoption of the section under which the plaintiff in error was indicted, settled the law for this state adversely to the doctrine contended for. It will be noticed that that section makes no exceptions, but makes the taking of property-from the custody of the officer, whether peaceably or otherwise, a misdemeanor. It was evidently the intention of the legislature to require all parties who might claim title to personal property levied on by the sheriff or other proper officer to assert such title by legal proceedings in the courts. Ample provision is made by law for the protection of the rights of third parties,