Wickham v. Miller

12 Johns. 320 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1815

Yates, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first question in this cause is as to the validity of the executions originally issued by the justice; whether the re*322newal by him; as stated, continued the, authority to the oflicer, , utider the. statute, to levy on the property.

The 11th section of the act for the recovery of debts to the value, of 25 dollars, among’ other things,., states,, that whenever judgment- shall be given against either plaintiff Or defendant, the court shall grant execution thereupon, directed to any constable within .the county, commanding-him t,d. levy, the debt, • or damages and costs, of the goods and chattels of the person against whom such execution shall be granted,' his arms and ■.accoutrements excepted ; and to bring the money at a. certain time and place therein to be mentioned, before the justice who issued the execution, to render to the. party who recovered the game; arid if no goods or chattels cam bo found,, or notsufficient ■fa satisfy such execution, the party recovering the judgment may, ■from time to time, renew such execution, or have further execu•» ition against the goods and. chattels of the party against tvkom ■ such judgment. is recovered, of may bring" an action of debt thereon, &q< : ■ • .

I do not think that a formal written return of the constable, pn the execution, that no goods or chattels can be found, is necessary; the requisitions of the statute may be complied with, ■without endorsing a return on the process; .and if the constable -has given information to the magistrate of the fact,'that no goods Or chattels can be- found, on which the justice is induced to renew the execution, it must be deemed sufficient to protect the rights of the party in whose favour it. issues; andj of course, .will justify the officer to Whom it is delivered in proceeding pn it; ,

,, The statute never'Contemplated, that a new execution should issue, specially statiág the return and renewal; and no more is .required by it, than an endorsement of such renewal on the original execution by the justice, as was ;done here, This has been the general (if not uniform) practice of courts of this description, since the passing of the act authorizing renewals; and l ean discover no reason why a different and more rigid practice should be enforced, If there should he any collusion between the constable and the debtor, in making a false representation to the magistrate, in relation to the goods ,and chattels, with a view of giving further time of payment, the .endorsement of renewal is conclusive evidence of the previous return or representation made by the constable; for, without it, the *323justice could not have obtained possession of the execution to renew it; so that the party, in seeking redress, has the benefit of testimony equally certain with a return endorsed oh the execution.

The renewal of the execution is a judicial act of the magis-» trate, and Ought not to involve the Officer; who is obliged to do his duty, It might have been delivered to another consta-'ble, who would have been obliged to procééd in collecting-the amount, without inquiring into the truth as to the existence of the former return or representation by the officer in whose hands it had been. And this must continue to be the practice, unless an alteration in the statute shall be made, directing the return to be endorsed on the execution before renewal. In its present form, the act admits of no such construction, but authorizes a renewal in ease no goods or chattels can be found; of which fact the justice must be informed by the Constable» And the endorsement of such renewal on the execution, as before stated, is conclusive evidence that such information had been given, to the satisfaction of the justice, by the officer to whom it had been delivered. The court below, therefore, decided correctly, that the renewed executions, under which the avowant justified the taking, were valid in law.

But admitting that those executions had been improperly renewed, so as to have no validity-, still the party might have new execution's for the amount of the demand, the judgments-still existing in full force; and, under the circumstances of this ease, I think the right of thé plaintiff to this property might well be questioned. If he intended to be protected under the' fieri facias on which the sheriff had advertised, he ought to have purchased at a sale under iU His settling with the sheriff the debt due on it, and paying the residue of the consideration for the goods, gave him no better title thab if the whole had been paid to Canfield-. It is evident that at that time he knew of the judgments before the magistrate; and I am aware that this knowledge, of itself,, would not destroy the sale, nor would the non-delivery of the goods be more than prima facia evidence to invalidate it, and might be explained by circumstances; but if he knew of the judgments, and purchased with a view, and for the purpose, of defeating the party’s remedy in relation to those goods,, towards satisfying-his demand, on the ground that those executions were void, and knowing that new *324executions might issue on those judgments, I should doubt the validity of his bill of sale. All those circumstances must have been known to the plaintiff, for it is expressly stated, that the goods in question were in the hands of the constable, under those executions, at the time he purchased.

In Beals v. Guernsey, (8 Johns. Rep. 446.) this principle is, in a great measure, recognised. We there say, that if a purchaser knows of the judgment, and purchases with the view, and for the purpose, of defeating the creditor’s execution, it is void, notwithstanding a full price had been paid by the purchaser.

The decision of this cause, however, does not rest upon that point. The statute, in my view, authorized' the renewal of the execution in the manner it has taken place; and, upon that ground, the judgment in the court below must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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