3 How. Pr. 262 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
Under the circumstances of this case, I think the levy of the deputy sheriff on personal property of the Defendant, D. Gros, sufficient to satisfy, the Plaintiffs’ execution is, as to J. D. Gros and Ms grantees, to be regarded a satisfaction of the judgment of the Plaintiffs. J. D.
As between the Plaintiff and Defendant, a levy may be made and abandoned without extinguishing the judgment, the levy may be relinquished at the request of the Defendant. The personal property levied upon may be eloigned by him or fraudulently taken by him from the sheriff, or the levy may be overreached by prior lien; in all such and like cases, the levy would not be an extinguishment of the judgment. Wherever the levy fails to produce satisfaction without any fault oí the Plaintiff, he may proceed to enforce the collection of his judgment by a second execution, (23 Wend. 501.) In Green v. Burke, 23 Wend. 490, a constable, who was a minor, had made a levy and then abandoned it without the knowledge or consent of the Plaintiff, to relieve himself from the consequences of his unlawful act of taking upon himself the duties of a constable while a minor. It was there held that the Plaintiff might sue out a new execution and levy upon other property ; there the question was between the parties to the original judgment, and the levy failed to produce satisfaction without the fault of the Plaintiff; the case of Green v. Burke does not overrule the case of Wood v. Torrey, or the cases in 12 John. 207 ; 4 Cow. 417 ; 7 Cow. 21 ; but, on the contrary, these cases are cited by Judge Cowen, in Green v. Burke, with approbation. The cases in 2 Hill, 329, and in 1 Denio, 574, go no further than Green v. Burke; neither of the cases impugns the principle that a levy upon sufficient personal property to satisfy the execution voluntarily relinquished by the Plaintiff, is an extinguishment of the judgment as to a subsequent bona fiide purchaser, for a valuable consideration, of lands bound by the judgment. In Green v. Burke, 501, Cowen, Justice, says, “the Plaintiff may, by tampering with the levy himself, lose his debt, as if he release property from arrest which is sufficient to pay the debt.” But there are other reasons in this case, why the Plaintiffs should not be permitted to enforce their judgment against the land purchased by J. D. Gros. The deputy sheriff, we have
The fact of the great delay of the Plaintiffs, in enforcing their judgment, cannot well be accounted for upon any other ground than that the note was taken by them in satisfaction of the judgment. At all events, after so great a lapse of time, and under circumstances tending so strongly to induce a belief that the judgment of the Plaintiffs was satisfied, it will be inequitable to allow them now to enforce it against tona fide purchasers.
Upon another principle, the Plaintiffs ought not to be permitted to collect their judgment out of the lands purchased by J. D. Gros. A sheriff cannot take a bond or other security on a “fi. fa.fi and still hold the execution in his hands, (7 John. 425.) The present case does not come within the case of Bank of Orange Co. v. Wakeman, 1 Cow. 46 ; in that case the sheriff took the Defendant’s note in payment of the execution, without the authority of the Plaintiff or bis attorney. Here the deputy sheriff took the note by the authority of the Plantiffs.
A rule must be entered directing a perpetual stay of proceedings on the judgment, and execution in this suit, as respects the lots of land described in the printed notice of sale, marked 1, 2, 3, being the lands purchased by J. D. Gros, as aforesaid.