42 Tenn. 310 | Tenn. | 1865
delivered the opinion of the Court.
During the pendency of the suit of J. Y. Stewart and Wife vs. L. J. Magness, in the Circuit Court of
The subpoena came to the hands of one Davis, a Deputy Sheriff, by whom it was executed on Magness. Afterwards the cause came on to be tried, and R. Magness being solemnly called to come into Court and give evidence in behalf of the plaintiffs, came not, but made default, and thereupon a judgment nisi was rendered against him for such default. A sci. fa. was awarded, and he was summoned to appear at a subsequent term of the Court, and show cause, if any he could, why said judgment should not be made final. To the sci. fa. the defendant filed a plea, in. which it avers, in substance, that at the time of the issuance and execution of said subpoeena, J. Y. Stewart, one of the plaintiffs in said suit, was the Sheriff of DeKalb County, to whom said process was directed, and that Davis, by whom it was executed, was the Under-Sheriff, or deputy of said Stewart. To this plea the plaintiffs demurred, alleging as causes for demurrer, that said plea was insufficient, that it was not in proper form, and was not filed in time. His Honor, the Circuit Judge, overruled the demurrer, and gave to plaintiffs leave to reply, which they declined to do; and thereupon, the Court dismissed the sci. fa., and gave judgment against the plaintiffs for costs; and they have appealed to this Court.
It is now insisted the plea is in abatement. Were this true, it is certainly defective in form, according
And this brings us to what we conceive to be the principal question in the case. Do the matters stated in the plea constitute a valid and sufficient defense to the action ? Has a Sheriff power to execute process, issued in a suit to which he is a party? In the case of Ryner et al., vs. Stacy, 8 Hum., 288, this Court held that upon principles of public policy nothing was better settled than that a Sheriff has no right to an execution in which he is plaintiff, and upon the same principle, it is unlawful for a Deputy Sheriff to, execute process to which he is a party. The deputy
The forfeiture was taken, as appears from the sci. fa., at the February Term, 1859. At the February Term, 1861, upon application, it appearing to the Court that the original sci. fa. in the cause had been lost, an order was made by which the same was supplied; and from the supplied paper it appears the original sci. fa. was executed on the 10th day of April 1859; but it does not appear that the same had been on the files in the Clerk’s office, or if so, when it was lost; or that the defendant had ever had an opportunity to inspect or plead to it until the day on
The judgment of the Circuit Court will be affirmed.