15 Wend. 575 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836
By the Court,
The execution, when returned and filed in the clerk’s office, was a record, and like all other records imported absolute verity. The evidence given by the defendant to contradict the exemplified copy of the writ was wholly irregular, and in judgment of law proved nothing. If the sheriff was injured by the amendment ordered by the court, without notice to him, he should have made a motion to have the writ restored to its former state. The propriety of making the amendment, or the sufficiency of the grounds on which it was ordered, could not be inquired into in any collateral proceeding. But nó objection to the evidence was made by the plaintiff on the trial. The parties may have agreed upon the course that was pursued, for the purpose of giving the defendant all the benefit which he could have derived from a special motion to restore the writ to its former condition. It may therefore be proper to consider the case on the grounds taken at the trial.
Putting the case in the most favorable aspect for the defendant, it amounts to this: an execution, directed in the
In ascertaining whether the sheriff is answerable for the acts of his deputy, the question is, whether the latter did an official, or a mere personal act. If the act is personal only, and does not relate to his duty as an officer, he is not the agent or ^servant of the sheriff; 'but if he execute process under color or by virtue of his office, the sheriff is answerable for the consequences. It is not necessary to charge him, that the act of the deputy should in all cases be lawful, or one which he might rightfully do under the process. If it were so, the sheriff would not be liable where the deputy takes the property of some other person than the judgment debtor. Many other cases might be put, where the sheriff is answerable for the wrongful acts of his deputy. Where he acts by virtue of his office, third persons have a right to regard him as the mere servant or agent of another, and resort to the principal for the redress of any injury they may sustain. It would be a dangerous doctrine to hold that the sheriff may, for his own convenience, depute persons to discharge the duties of his office, and yet not be answerable to third persons for their misconduct. 7 Johns, R. 35. 1 Mass. R. 530. 4 id. 63. 1 Pick. 271.
Where the plaintiff in an execution interferes with a deputy, and directs him to proceed in some other way than that prescribed by law, the officer then becomes the agent of the party,
As the return was conclusive evidence of the satisfaction of the execution, the charge of the judge was sufficiently favorable to the defendant. Placing the plaintiff’s right to recover on this ground, the subordinate questions raised on the trial need not be considered.
When these parties were before the court, after the first trial, it was understood that the execution had been sent to the sheriff of the wrong county; but, as I understand the case made on the last trial, the execution was not only intended for, but sent to the sheriff of Allegany, and the misdirection in the body of the writ to the sheriff of Cattaraugus happened through the mistake of the plaintiff ’s clerk. As the writ was intended for and delivered to the sheriff of Allegany, and he has executed the process without any objection on the part of the judgment debtor, he cannot be allowed to with
New trial denied.