17 Del. 167 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1897
This is a rule to show cause why the sheriff’s return to Fi. Fa. No. io to the September term, 1897, should not be quashed and stricken from the record. The return is, Nulla bona and afterwards levied on lands and tenements as per description annexed. The inquisition was held on the 19th of October following, under a rule issued after the return of the Fi. Fa.
The sworn petition of the defendant sets forth the grounds of his application, and we can consider no others.
The first question discussed in the argument was, whether this Court, under any circumstances, at any time, had a right, upon a rule to show cause, to quash a sheriff’s return to an execution. It was contended on the part of the plaintiff that this could not be done.
Whatever may be the practice in England or elsewhere, it is perfectly well settled in this State that a false return of a sheriff to an execution may be quashed by the Court.
Under our practice there could be no doubt that at the September term, the return term of the writ, it would have been competent for the defendant to have moved to quash the return upon the ground that it was false or untrue,. and that he had goods'and chattels which were liable to be taken in execution. Under the statute his land could not, without his consent, betaken in execution until his goods- were exhausted.
The September term was the proper time to make this application and the delay in doing so until the November term is not justified or excused by anything before the Court.
• The rule upon this subject is found in Swiggett vs. Kollock, 3 Houst., 326, an action of ejectment tried in 1866, in which the defendant claimed title under a sheriff’s deed.
On behalf of the plaintiff it was contended that the levy under the Fi. Fa. was void, because, first, it did not include all of the land of the defendant in the writ, and, second, that the description of the land was too indefinite.
As to the second objection the description was held to be sufficient.
As to the first objection the Court said that it came too late, and that ‘ ‘ It might have been taken at the return term of the levy, to wit, at the April T. 1851, and the inquisition and condemnation would have been set aside upon its being shown to the Court that all the lands had not been levied upon; but not having taken it then, it cannot be taken now; because, it is a rule of this Court, that no objection to the inquisition can be taken after the return term of the Fi. Fa. and inquisition, except in the special case of want of notice.”
The petition of the defendant in this case ■ does not deny notice or knowledge of the alleged false return at the September term, nor is there anything in the petition from which want of notice or knowledge can be inferred. Indeed the petition is perfectly consistent with the the hypothesis that the defendant did at the return term of the writ know all about the alleged false return, and purposely refrained from making objection at that term so as to involve the plaintiff in further expense and irregularity.
It is true that the law does not require the sheriff to give notice to the defendant of a return of Nulla bona and levy on land, yet if the return of Nulla bona be false, it is the right of the defendant to have it set aside; but he cannot have this done unless he has knowledge of the false return.
The defendant having failed in his petition to deny notice or knowledge at the September term of the alleged false return, we hold that his present application comes too late.
Rule discharged.