Cole v. Parker

7 Iowa 167
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 3, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 Iowa 167 (Cole v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Parker, 7 Iowa 167 (iowa 1858).

Opinion

Stockton, J.

A sheriff is’ to serve, or otherwise execute, according to law, and return all writs, and other legal process issued by lawful authority, and to him directed, or committed. Code, section 170. He is the officer constituted by law to execute the process of the court. It is not in his discretion whether to execute it or not. He is not allowed to provide for the plaintiff another remedy for the collection of his debt. His duty, when the process is placed in his hands, is simply to execute "it with the utmost expedition, or as soon after it is received as the nature of the case will admit. Racon’s Abridgment, Title, Sheriff N.; Denson v. Sledge, 2 Devereux, 136. Such being the duty of the sheriff, any agreement to induce him to omit its performance, is void. Chitty on Contracts, 231. If a sheriff takes a bond, or promise, to keep him harmless in the doing of a lawful act, it is good ; but if it be in the doing of that which he ought not to do, the bond, or promise, is void, and against law. Blackett v. Crissop, 1 Lord Raymond, 279.

The only mode in which the officer could obey the exigency of the writ, in this case, was by seizing the property of the defendant therein, in the mode prescribed by the statute. He must take the property into the custody of the law. Any agreement to omit the performance of this duty, as by permitting the defendant to retain the possession, and enjoy the use of the property levied on, after the seizure, is, at common law, illegal and void.

[170]*170The defendant desiring so to do, may discharge the property from the attachment, by giving bond and security for the delivery of the same to the sheriff, to satisfy any judgment that may be obtained in the suit. This is the only mode pointed out by the statute, in which the sheriff is authorized to release the property from seizure. He cannot take any other obligation or security from the defendant, in the place of levying the writ; neither to save himself harmless from the consequences of the failure, nor for the payment of whatever judgment may be rendered in the suit. Should he do so, the act is without authority; the officer will not be protected against the party at whoso suit the writ has issued ; the agreement, or security, being without consideration, so far as the officer is concerned, cannot be enforced by him ; and whether in his hands, or when attempted to be enforced for his benefit, is utterly void. Winter v. Kinney, 1 Comstock, 365.

The only consideration for the agreement of the defendants in this case, is the forbearance of the sheriff to execute the writ of attachment. This forbearance is only a good consideration, when moving from the party entitled to receive the debt forborne. The promise of. any other person to forbear, is merely officious, and insufficient to support a promise.

The agreement sued on, bears a strict anlaogy to those agreements made with a sheriff, or other officer, to obtain an indulgence not authorized by law, to persons under arrest, or in contemplation of an escape. The taking, by such officer, from a party in custody an obligation, or security, not sanctioned by statute, for the ease and favor of the prisoner, and as' an indemnity for a breach of duty on the part of the officer, has been uniformly held void, under the statute of 23 Henry VI., cli. 9, in England, at least when such agreement has been presented by the officer himself, or by others for his benefit — or when the attempt has been made to set up and enforce it for his relief or protection. Winter v. Kinney, 1 Comstock, 365; Denson v. Sledge, 2 Devereux, 136. At common law, independ[171]*171ent of statute, if the agreement made, or security taken colore officii, contemplates an indemnity for a'fraudulent escape of a party arrested;' or for any act inconsistent with the duty of the officer, whereby either official oppression, or injury to the plaintiff in the suit, may result, such agreement, or security, is void. Love v. Palmer, 7 Johnson, 159.

In Dole v. Bull and Porter, 2 Johnson Cases, 239, it is said that the general' rule seems to be, that a bond taken by the sheriff, to induce a less rigorous imprisonment, is good, if the indulgence be such as he would otherwise, consistently with his duty, be authorized to grant; but if it confer a privilege inconsistent with his duty, by which the object of the imprisonment, as a means to compel a satisfaction of the plaintiff’s demand, may be impaired or defeated, the bond is illegal and void. It is then a bond for the ease and favor of the prisoner, and contrary to the statute.

The policy of the law in declaring void, agreements and securities not taken in conformity to the statute, when attempted to be set up and enfored by the officer, is to guard against official oppression on the one side, and a lax performance of duty on the other. Winter v. Kinney, supra. When a party is in custody, or when, as in this case, property is to be attached, and the officer, instead of taking the obligation for his release, or for the release of the property specifically prescribed by the statute, takes one at his own volition, more or less onerous to the prisoner, or to the defendant, he asserts, by virtue of his office, an illegal claim of right or authority to take it. He takes it colore officii, and although such agreement or security may lawfully be taken by the party at whose instance the arrest or seizure is made, it cannot be taken by the officer; Rogers v. Reeves, 1 Term R., 422; Fuller v. Prest, 7 Term Rep. 109. So, a party may consent that the prisoner may go at large, on a deposit of money to discharge the debt; or dispensing with the bail bond, may accept his own, or the undertaking of another, that he will appear; but in these [172]*172cases, the officer must not be a party in anyway beneficially interested in {lie agreement or security. See authorities above cited.

It is not to be understood, however, that an officer can take no security, unless it be a security authorized by statute. In Burrell v. Acker, 23 Wend., 606, the plaintiff as sheriff, had levied an execution on property of one Jones, and permitted the same to remain in possession of Burrell, on his written agreement, to deliver the same on request, or in default thereof, to pay and satisfy the amount to be levied on the execution. It was held that the agreement was valid, though not sanctioned by any statutory enactment: — that the words “color of office” necessarily imply an illegal claim of right or authority to take the security, or to do the act in question, by virtue of his office, which claim is a mere color or pretence on the part of the officer. Taking a security by virtue of his office, implies that the act is lawful either by the common law, or by authority of some statute — taking a security by color of his office, necessarily implies that the act is unlawful and unauthorized, and that the legal right to take it, is a mere color or pi’etence; and the court held that as there was nothing in the bond declared on, which, even by implication, deprived the sheriff of the power to take the property, and sell it to satisfy the execution, or to return it to the defendant in execution, if he should think proper to pay the debt without a sale, he was entitled to recover on the agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Iowa 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-parker-iowa-1858.