Bondurant v. Buford

1 Ala. 359
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 Ala. 359 (Bondurant v. Buford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bondurant v. Buford, 1 Ala. 359 (Ala. 1840).

Opinion

COLLIER, C. J.

— The only question raised at the argument is this: has a person whose constitutional term of office as sheriff has expired, and who has been superseded by the election and qualification of a successor, the right to receive money on an execution, merely because it was placed in his hands for collection, previous to the expiration of his official term?

By the common law, sheriffs were appointed by the king, durante bene plácito, and were removable by him. When a new sheriff was appointed, and had taken the necessary oaths, &e., the writ de ecconeratio officii issued, which discharged the old sheriff; and until the writ of discharge was delivered to the old sheriff, he might lawfully exercise the duties of his office. (Werbie’s case, 3 Coke’s Rep. 77; 6 Bacon’s Ab. 159, et post; Watson’s Shff. 20: 1.)

In this State, the official tenure of the sheriff is limited by the constitution, to three years, (Art. 4, sec. 24.) So that in order to terminate his office no writ of discharge or other process is necessary; but the limitation prescribed by the constitution effects that end.

Though a sheriff ceases to be such de jure at the expiration of three years, from the time of his election, yet many of his acts may be valid as a sheriff de facto, even after that period, if his legally chosen successor has not been inducted, upon taking the oaths, and executing such a bond as the law requires. But whenever the new sheriff is thus admitted to the exercise of his official duties, the old sheriff cannot be regarded as an officer, either in fact or in lavv.

Though the law be as we have stated it, yet it may be laid down as general rule, that the sheriff or other officer, who has [362]*362begun an execution under proper authority, may be compelled to proceed in the same. Hence, it bath been adjudged that if a sheriff seize property on a fieri facías, and is discharged without having sold it, or having returned the writ, that notwithstanding such discharge, and without any writ of venditioni exponas he may sell the property remaining in his hands, and such sale and execution shall be good, by force of the writ of fieri facias. (2 Bacon’s Ab. 735; Watson’s Stiff. 188.)

In Purl’s lessee v. Duvall, (5 Har. & J. Rep. 69,) it appeared that a fieri facias was levied by the preceding sheriff, but the property was not sold for want of buyers; a venditioni exponas was placed in the hands of the successor, and the question was, whether the sheriff levying the fit. fa. should not have sold the property. The court said that the new sheriff “ had no authority to execute the writ of venditioni exponas. The authorities clearly establish the position, that if a sheriff, upon a fieri facias, seize goods, and return that they remain en hand pro defeclu emptorum, and he be removed, yet he, and not the new sheriff is to proceed in the execution; for an execution being an entire thing, he who begins it, must end it.” See also, 6 Bacon’s Ab. 161; Watson’s Sheriff, 22, 189, 190; Anon. 1; Hayw. Rep. 415.

In Gibb’s v. Mitchell, 2 Bay. Rep. 120, it was held that a sheriff having regularly levied a fieri facias, may sell after the year and a day, or even after he is out of office. And in Cox v. Joiner, 4 Bibb’s Rep. 94, it was decided that a venditioni expo-as gave no new authority, but by virtue of the levy, a sale may be made after the return day. See also, Gaines v. Clark, 1 Bibb’s Rep. 608.

It has been repeatedly adjudged that though a fieri facias cannot be levied after the day of its return is past, (Devoe v. Elliot, 2 Caines Rep. 243; Vail v. Lewis et al., 4. Johns. Rep. 450;) yet where a levy has been made, before the return day, the officer levying, may complete the execution by a sale after that day. (Lanier v. Stone, 1. Hawks. Rep. 329; Toomer v. Purkey, 1 Const. Court Rep. 323; Prescott v. Wright, 6 Mass. Rep. 20, Bernard v. Stevens, 2 Aik. Rep. 429.)

[363]*363At the common law, the goods of a party against whom a fieri facias issued, were bound as against the party himself, and ail claiming by assignment from, or by representation under him, from the test of the writ. And it was competent for the sheriff, after the death of the defendant, in a fieri facias, to seize the goods he may have left, provided, the writ bore test before his death, allhough not previously delivered to the sheriff.' So after the death of the plaintiff, the sheriff might execute a fieri facias, tested in his lifetime. (Watson’s Shff 173, 175, 176.)

In Jewett v. Smith, 12 Mass. Rep. 309, the same principle is recognized, but as by the laws of Massachusetts there is no lien upon the goods of the debtors by the judgment, the award of execution, or the delivery of it to the sheriff, it was held that if a defendant dies afier the issuance of a fieri facias and before the levy, the execution abated. And in Wagnon v. McCoy’s Ex’r. 2 Bibb’s Rep. 198, it was ruled that if a plaintiff die after execution delivered to the sheriff, but before it is levied or replevied, the execution abates. The court admitted the English rule lo be as we have stated it. but considered that the law of Kentucky which authorized a defendant to replevy his property levied on, abrogated the rule which prevailed in England. That inasmuch as the bond was to be executed to the plaintiff, it was necessary that the person described in the execution as such, should be living: and that one not in rerum natura could not be the obligee.

Though the common law which gave a lien from the test of a fieri facias has been modified in England by the statute of the 29 Chas. 11, so as to make it bind the goods of the defendant from the delivery of the writ to the sheriff, &c., yetthe property of the debt-tor is not divested until the process has been actually levied. (Watson’s Sheriff, 176.) But when the sheriff has duly seized goods under a writ of fieri facias, he then acquires such a special property in them as to enable him to maintain trespass or trover agaiust any person w’ho may take them out ol his posses1 sion, for he is answerable to the plaintifi to the value of the [364]*364goods. (Watson’s Sheriff, 190, ’1.) And the defendant is discharged from the judgment and all further execution, if the sheriff has taken goods to the amount of the debt, although he does not satisfy the plaintiff. (Watson’s Sheriff 191.)

We have stated the principles contained in this opinion, and cited the authorities by which they are sustained, that we may discover the nature of the writ of fieri fiadas; the authority it imparts to the sheriff, and its effect upon the property of the debtor, and thus learn at what point execution begins. And to us it seems clear that the reception of the writ is not the commencement of execution. True, the law declares the effect of depositing such process in the hands of the sheriff, to be the creation of a lien upon the personal estate of the defendant in favor of the plaintiff; yet in this, the sheriff may be entirely passive. For the better manifestation of the time of the delivery, the statute directs the sheriff to endorse the period of the receipt on the writ, but this is merely directory, and the lien is not impaired by its omission. (McCown & Conrow, and another, v. Keith & Kelly, at the last term.).

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ala. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bondurant-v-buford-ala-1840.