24 Me. 395 | Me. | 1844
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
A verdict was found on a former trial of
On coming to a consideration of the merits, the counsel for the plaintiff insist upon only one of the objections taken at the trial. That is, that the sale of the house, made by the sheriff on the execution, did not transfer the property to the purchaser. The principal objection to the sale is, that the property was not kept four days after seizure before it was offered for sale, because one of those days was the Lord’s day. To consider that day as liable to be reckoned as one of the four is attended with serious difficulty, as intimated in the case of Thayer v. Felt, 4 Pick. 354. The day of seizure is not to be reckoned as one of the four, and the sale cannot be legally made after the fourth day. Windsor v. China, 4 Greenl. 304; Caldwell v. Eaton, 5 Mass. R. 404. As the goods cannot be legally sold on the Lord’s day, if that day be not excluded in the enumeration of the four days, the property of the debtor cannot be effectually seized on Wednesday. And it is difficult to perceive, that the adjournment of the sale could be legally made before the fourth day. If the Court must come to these conclusions, it will not necessarily follow, that the plaintiff will be entitled to recover. The purchaser
It cannot however be admitted, that the title of the purchaser, as against the debtor, will depend upon the return of the officer showing, that the directions of the law have been observed in the sale of goods capable of a visible possession and delivery. The judgment against the debtor is considered as satisfied, after the sheriff has taken sufficient personal property of the debtor to pay it. Mountney v. Andrews, Cro. Eliz. 237. And the sheriff may sell the property after the decease of the debtor. Clerk v. Withers, 2 Ld. Raymond. 1072. This doctrine is also stated by Parsons C. J. in the case of Ladd v. Blunt, 4 Mass. R. 403, who observes, “ where goods sufficient to satisfy the judgment, are seized on a fieri
In the case of Clark v. Foxcroft, 6 Greenl. 96, it was decided, that the sheriff could justify the seizure of goods on final process without showing a return of it; “ and that the title of a purchaser under a sheriff’s sale on execution might be good, although the execution might not be returned.” So in the case of Bealls v. Guernsey, 8 Johns. R. 54, in an action brought by a purchaser from the debtor, it was decided, that the sheriff might justify the taking of the property on an execution against the debtor, without showing a return of the execution, or any return indorsed upon it. If the sheriff can justify the taking of the property of the debtor on execution, as against a purchaser from him, without proof of any legal disposition of it, a purchaser under his sale by showing only, that he had acquired possession of it through him, might well be permitted also to justify the taking by the sheriff, without exhibiting any legal proof of a sale. The rights of all parties may be fully protected, if a sale of goods, made by the sheriff on execution, be regarded as a legal transfer of the property, although he may not have conformed to the requirements of the statute in making the sale. Any person injured by such proceedings may, by an action against him, obtain ample redress. If the property be not considered as transferred by such -a sale, the debtor may receive the benefit of the sale by having the proceeds applied to satisfy his debt, and may then, by his •own sale, obtain the value of the goods a second time. While the sheriff may be compelled to pay their full value to the 'purchaser without the hope of remuneration, although the debtor may hay.e suffered little or no injury from his irregular
The case of Sanford v. Durfee, 19 Pick. 485, states that a sale of personal property on execution, was held to be valid without a return of the proceedings of the officer upon the execution.
In this case the sale was made by the sheriff on August 6, 1830, and he returned the execution, on which it was made, satisfied in part by the proceeds of that sale. The debtor received the benefit of that sale by a satisfaction of so much of the judgment, on which the execution issued. Although the house appears to have been sold for a small sum of money, the sheriff must be presumed to have obtained the full value; and if he did not, through any misconduct, he would be liable to make full compensation to the party injured. The plaintiff’s title to the house is derived from a subsequent sale by the debtor, made on December 3, 1830; and he presents himself as a purchaser from the debtor after the property had been seized, advertised, and sold on execution and the proceeds of the sale applied in discharge of the debt. He cannot therefore justly claim to assert any other, or greater rights to the property, than the debtor, from whom he derived his title, could have done. And does not therefore exhibit a title superior to that of the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, if that sale be considered as irregularly made. These remarks are not intended to apply to the sale of any description of personal property not tangible, and represented only by documentary evidence of title.
Judgment on the verdict.