16 S.E. 174 | N.C. | 1892
The term of the court to which the sheriff was bound to return the execution adjourned sine die on the afternoon of Thursday, 5 November, 1891. The sheriff mailed the execution with his return indorsed thereon at Raleigh on the morning of the said 5 November. It was taken out of the postoffice at Hillsboro by the clerk of Orange Superior Court on the day after the adjournment of the term.
Executions shall be returnable to the term of the court next after that from which they bear teste. The Code, sec. 449. The sheriff is allowed all the days of the term to return an execution, unless he be ruled, upon motion and cause shown, to return it on some intermediate day. Person v. Newsom,
It is true that, as appears by the answer of defendant, an alias execution afterwards came into his hands and he collected the money thereon and the plaintiff has received the same. We are precluded from giving relief on account of the hardship of the case. The letter and spirit of the law are plain, and the statute is older than the State. Its purpose is to secure promptness and efficiency on the part of its officers. A failure to execute it from motives of sympathy would lead to looseness in administration and impair the strength and dignity of the law. No sufficient excuse was offered for the failure to return the execution and it was error to discharge the rule.
REVERSED.
Cited: Boyer v. Teague, ante, 247; Swain v. Phelps,