12 Ala. 621 | Ala. | 1847
We need not enter upon the inquiry, how suits were first allowed to be prosecuted in behalf of an in
The language of the act is, “ where any sheriff shall levy execution on property claimed by any person, not a party to such execution, such person may make oath to such property, and it shall then be the duty of the sheriff,” &c. It is evident that an infant might make the oath which is here required, but it is argued that he cannot execute the bond, which the sheriff is required to take from the claimant, before delivering to him the property. Although an infant, being unable to execute a bond, may thus be disabled from a literal compliance with the statute, we do not think this a sufficient reason for refusing the benefit of the law, to this elass of persons, when all the objects the law had in view may be accomplished, by the execution of the bond by a pro-chein ami. The act is general, giving this remedy to all persons, whose property is wrongfully levied on to pay the debt of another, and if he happens to be an infant, he may under the provision of the act first cited, assert his rights through the medium of a prochein ami, who will be responsible to the other party for the production of the property, as well as for the costs, if the infant is cast in the action.
The argument, that it is not for the benefit of the infant to permit the claim to be asserted in his behalf, by his next friend, because the claimant, if successful, would be entitled to the possession of the property, and might waste it, is founded on a misapprehension of the statute. The act requires the sheriff, upon the execution of the bond, “ to return the property levied upon, to the person out of whose possession the same was taken,” so that the property in such a case, would be returned to the proper custodian, and the execu
The statue is general in its terms, and gives the right to all! persons whose property is improperly levied on to pay the-debts of another. It was doubtless intended to include infants, and it follows, that as in other cases, it may be prosecuted in their names, by a prochein arm, who may execute the bond, and if necessary, make the affidavit required by the-statute.
The objection that the prochein ami is the party who appears upon the record as claimant, appears to rest upon the statement of the case by the clerk. The affidavit, and bond,, disclose the true character of the prochein ami, and that he is prosecuting the suit not for his own benefit, but as the next friend of the minors, and this cannot be altered by the statement of the clerk, that he is the claimant.
Let the judgment be reversed, and the case remanded.