A. Tyler & Co. v. Dunton

1 Tenn. Ch. R. 361
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 361 (A. Tyler & Co. v. Dunton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Tyler & Co. v. Dunton, 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 361 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

On the 31st of May,. 1871, Jones, a constable, levied two executions upon judgments rendered by a justice of the peace against the defendant, William Dun-ton, on a stock of groceries, the property of Dunton. On the same day, Stull and Morgan, two other constables, with the consent of Jones, levied other justices’ executions on the same property, but the judgments, on which these latter executions issued, were afterwards set aside as void and the levies abandoned. On the same day, also, and while Jones, Stull and Morgan were taking stock of the goods levied on, L. L. Losey, as deputy sheriff, came to Dunton’s store-house where the goods were, with an execution from the circuit court in favor of R,. B. Cheatham & Co., against Dunton, and, upon inquiry, being informed of the previous levies, and taking a memorandum of the amount, he said to the constables and to the debtor then present, that he levied the execution upon the goods, “ subject to the former levies.” To this no objection was made. He did not lay his hands upon any of the goods, or take possession of them. It does not appear that Jones, who made the first levy, said anything when Losey announced that he had made a levy subject to the previous levies. Dunton, the judgment-debtor, testifies in his deposition that ‘ ‘ when Losey started to go out, he said to Jones in substance, “ ‘ I suppose you will let me have what there is left?’” “I don’t remember,’’ adds the witness, “ that Jones said anything in reply,” nor is he certain that Morgan and Stull said anything, but if they did, they said “all right,” or something to that effect. Losey returned [362]*362the execution levied on the stock of goods subject to the levies made by Jones, having doubtless learned before writing out his return that the Morgan and Stull executions were void.

On the 2d of June, 1871, the complainant, A. Tyler & Co., recovered judgments against Dunton before a justice, and caused executions to issue, which were returned nulla bona, and on the same day they filed their bill, setting out the levies by Jones, and insisting that after such levy, the property was not subject to another levy of an execution at law; that the execution-debtor had only an equity in the goods so levied on, which could not-be reached except in this court. He insisted that the levy of the Cheatham execution was invalid for this reason, and was, moreover, insufficient in any event for want of being made as the law requires.

It seems that the goods in controversy were sold under the orders of the court in this cause, Jones’ executions satisfied, and the controversy is now over the surplus between complainants and Cheatham & Co.

At the hearing of the cause, it struck me as very clear that the levy of Cheatham’s execution was good, and gave the defendants the better right, and I so decided, perhaps too promptly. At the solicitation of the complainants’ counsel, however, I consented to receive additional briefs, and take the case under advisement. The new arguments embody the result of much labor on both sides, and are ably prepared. The authorities cited are, however, not directly in point, nor overwhelmingly conclusive either way. Singularly enough the precise question does not seem ever to have been positively ruled, and, after all, the decision must turn upon general principles, and reasoning from analogy. But the complainant’s counsel has succeeded in convincing me that the point is not so clear as I supposed, and is, on the contrary, one of great doubt.

Before proceeding to discuss it, one or two preliminary matters should be disposed of. At the hearing, the defendants, Cheatham & Co., had not filed a certified transcript of [363]*363their judgment, which the complainants insisted was a fatal omission. I did not think so at the time, nor do I now in view of the pleadings, the bill raising no issue upon the existence of the judgment, and only disputing the validity of the levy of the execution. The defendants, however, that the case might not go off upon this technical objection, after-wards produced a transcript of the judgment, and asked leave to file it, which I permitted to be done. Thereupon, the complainants renewed a motion, supported by affidavit, which had previously been made when the cause was still on the rule docket, and disallowed by the court, but of which no entry was made on the minutes, to file an amended bill alleging that Losey, who made the levy of the Cheatham execution, was not at the time a deputy sheriff, but was assuming to act without authority. The facts upon which this averment is sought to be rested, are that the deputation in writing on the execution, 'as well as the signature of the sheriff thereto, is in Losey’s own handwriting; that the sheriff has admitted the fact that the deputation was written by Losey and not by him, and therefore the complainants charge that it was done without the authority of the sheriff. But the affidavit and amended bill are fatally defective in not going further and .showing that the deputation was not recognized, ratified and confirmed by the sheriff. Such a ratification, it is clear, would be equally as efficacious as a previous authority. Public policy requires that the acts of the sheriff’s deputies should be sustained as between individuals, no matter how informal the authority may have been, if, in fact, there was authority, either in advance or by subsequent ratification. State v. Allen, 5 Ire. Law, 36. The motion to file the amended bill is disallowed.

At common law, the levy of an execution vested the officer with a title and right to possession, which he could maintain against the defendant in the execution and all third persons. The title thus acquired was, of course, not absolute, but only for the purpose of satisfying the execution debt. If the debt were paid, the title and right of possession reverted instanter [364]*364to the execution-debtor, without any conveyance from the sheriff. So, as between the execution-creditor and the execution debtor, if the property after levy was restored to the defendant, or came to his possession and was used by him, there was no satisfaction of the judgment-debt. So, if the property sold for more than enough to pay the execution-debt, the surplus was the property of the execution-debtor, and might be reached by his creditors by garnishment or otherwise. These common law principles have all been recognized in this state.

These general principles, particularly in so far as they elucidate the title of the sheriff acquired by the levy and the interest remaining in the debtor, have been most clearly brought out in some of the North Carolina cases. In Popelston v. Skinner, 4 Dev. & Baf. Law, 156, 158, Ruffin, C. J., says : “ It is true that it is said, when a sheriff seizes goods, the property is changed. A seizure to the value of the debt, jprima facie satisfies it and discharges the debtor; and therefore the defendant loses the property and it vests in the sheriff. But if the sheriff seizes less than the value, the debt on the one hand is not paid; and if he seizes more than the' value, the property, on the other hand, does not belong absolutely to the sheriff. The general proposition, then, that the property in goods taken in execution is in the sheriff, must be understood with qualifications. The law gives him the property to enable him to raise the money he is commanded to make; and the property is given, as far as it is necessary for that purpose, but no further.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-tyler-co-v-dunton-tennctapp-1873.