Arnold v. Heirs

1 Ohio 458
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Ohio 458 (Arnold v. Heirs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Heirs, 1 Ohio 458 (Ohio 1824).

Opinion

Opinion of the court, by

Judge Burnet :

Several questions are presented in this case: 1. Did the writ ■of error and supersedeas avoid and vacate the execution and levy, so as to render it a nullity, or did it merely stay the proceedings of the sheriff. 2. If the latter, did the order of the court, quashing the vend. expo, and setting aside *the appraisement, n-ffect the lev. fa. and the levy made thereon. 3. If the supersedeas merely stayed the proceedings, was the execution of November 28, 1818, and the sale made thereon, merely irregular, or altogether void, so as to entitle the plaintiff to the relief prayed for. 4. Can a scire facias be sustained in a ease like the present.

As to the first point, no authority has been cited to show the effect of a supersedeas on an execution levied on real estate. It is said in the books, that the object of a supersedeas is to stay proceedings till the errors are disposed of. In the Bishop of Ossory’s case, Cro. Jas. 534, it was resolved by all the court, that the writ of error was a supersedeas till the error was examined, affirmed, or reversed. In Badger v. Lloyd, 3 Salk. 145, it was said by Holt, Chief Justice, that although a writ of error forecloses the court, and ties up their hands, yet it doth not alter the right of the parties.

If a writ of error be allowed on the return day of a ca. sa., the sheriff may, notwithstanding, return the writ non est, the plaintiff shall have the benefit of the return, and may afterward proceed against the bail. Parkins v. Wilson, 2 Ld. Raym. 1256. This could not be the case if the allowance rendered the execution a nullity. The same inference may be drawn from the reason given for quashing the writ in the case of Smith v. Nicholson, 2 Stra. 1186. A ca. sa. had been taken out on the 3d of December, for the purpose of proceeding against bail. On the next day a writ of error was allowed, after which the ca. sa. was returned non est inventus. After the writ of error was at an end, the plaintiff proceeded by scire facias against the bail. On motion the whole proceedings were set aside, because the return of non est inventus was obtained after notice of the writ of error, which, in its nature, stops all proceedings. The sheriff could not so much as look after [464]*464the defendant, in order to ground such a return thereon. The reason is apparent; as the rule required the ca. sa. to remain four days in the sheriff’s office before he was authorized to return a non est inventus, for the purpose of fixing the bail, and as the writ of error was allowed the next day after the ca. sa. issued, the operation of the ca. sa. was suspended before it was ripe for the return, and while something remained to *be done, which the allowance prohibited ; but in the preceding case, the four days having elapsed before the allowance, the return was held to be good, and the bail was fixed. This could not have been the case if the writ of error had affected the ca. sa. so as to render void that which had been done before the allowance. In the one case, the execution being ripe for a return, before the supersedeas, the return was sustained, though made after the supersedeas. In the other case, the execution having been superseded before it was ripe for a return, was considered a nullity. The principle on which these cases were decided being applied to the case in hand, must lead to this conclusion : that as the lev. fa. had been levied, and was ready to be returned before the writ of error, the return was well made, and after the writ of error was at an end, the plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of it; but if the writ qf error had been allowed after the execution had issued, but before the levy, the proceedings would have been void. We find many cases in which executions have been set aside for having issued after the allowance of writs of error; but where the allowance has been after the issuing of the execution, the operation has been to stay further proceedings, leaving the matter in statu quo. The general rule seems to be, that the writ of error operates as a supersedeas from the time of the allowance, and will therefore avoid an after execution, or levy; but on the principle here contended for, it will have a retrospective effect, by operating on a writ and levy anterior to the allowance. It would seem as reasonable that it should overreach an execution on which a part of the money had been levied and paid over before the allowance, as that it should render void a levy made before the allowance. .Neither the necessity of the case, nor the object of the writ, requires such an affect. It does not follow from the allowance that the judgment will be reversed; when, therefore, a levy is made on land, which neither changes the possession, nor restricts the occupant in the use of it, his purpose is gained by a stay of proceedings till the judgment be reversed or affirmed.

[465, 466]*465, 466It is decided in Withers v. Henley, Cro. Jas. 379; cited by defendant, that a supersedeas is as good a cause to discharge a prisoner taken on a ca. sa. as the first process was to arrest him. This, however, is from *the necessity of the case, for on no other principle can the party have the benefit of his writ of error. While that is pending the plaintiff ought not to hold a satisfaction of his judgment by detaining the defendant in custody. But the case of Sare v. Shelton, 2 Roll. Ab. 491, where it was holden, that, if before sale of goods seized under ft. fa., the defendant deliver a writ of supersedeas, he shall have the goods again, because the property is not altered by the seizure, has been declared not to be law. 4 Bac., title Supersedeas, pl. 6, 7; Yelv. 6. In Charter v. Peter, Cro. Eliz. 597, the defendant’s goods had been taken on .a ft. fa., and before sale a writ of error and supersedeas were taken. The sheriff returned the seizure, also that the goods remained in his hands for want of bidders, and that a supersedeas was awarded. All the court held, notwithstanding the supersedeas, in regard it came not to the sheriff until he had begun to make execution, that a vend. expo, should be awarded to perfect it. In Regina v. Nash, 2 Ld. Raym. 990, it was decided, that if goods are once levied, a certiorari, to remove the conviction, will not suspend their sale. In Clerk v. Withers, 1 Salk. 323, it was ruled that the sheriff might proceed to sell, after the plaintiff’s death, and that execution being an entire thing, can not be superseded after it is begun. But admitting the case of Sare v. Shelton to be good law, it is by no means conclusive as to this case, for when goods and chattels are taken, the defendant loses the possession, and the property may be lost or destroyed during the pendency of the writ of error; but on a lev. fa. no such privation tabes place. The possession and use of the property remain with the defendant; there is, therefore, no necessity for setting aside the writ and levy.

The second question does not admit of a doubt. The motion was confined to the vend. expo, and the appraisement, and the order of the court extended no further. The levy was not comprehended in the motion, and can not be affected by the order. • It is the constant practice to set aside valuations of property, without disturbing the levy; and it never has been supposed that such an order rendered it necessary to sue out a new writ, or to obtain a new levy.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-heirs-ohio-1824.