Dewey v. . White

65 N.C. 225
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 N.C. 225 (Dewey v. . White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dewey v. . White, 65 N.C. 225 (N.C. 1871).

Opinion

Rodman, J.

At Rail Term, 1870, of Mecklenburg Superior Court, the plaintiff obtained a rule on the Sheriff to show cause why $7,000 in his hands, the proceeds of the sale of certain land under execution, should not be applied to the *226 -payment of the executions in his favor, which were for debts owing by the firm of M. Martin & Co., of which the part.ners were M. Martin and John Wilkes. The application was supported by the affidavit of Wilkes that the debts were partnership debts and that the property belonged to the firm. Notice was ordered to be given to B. S. Guión, M. L. 'Wriston and others claiming to have the fund or a part of it applied to other executions against Wilkes, and against Wilkes and Martin, for their separate debts. The Sheriff answers the rule, and states, that at the time of the sale he had in his hands the following writs of venditioni exponas all issued on fi. fas. tested of 14 Oct., 1867, which had leen levied on the land m question as the property of M. Martin & Co.

He says the writs came to his hands and were levied in the Spring of 1867, but as this is contradictory to what is stated as to the teste of the original fi. fas., it is considered a mistake.

The executions were as follows :

No. 1. T. W. Dewey v. John Wilkes and M. Martin.

2. T. W. Dewey v. John Wilkes and B. S. Guión.

3. T. W. Dewey v. M. Martin, John Wilkes and Jasper Stowe.

4. Eirst Nat. Bank of Charlotte v. John Wilkes and M. X. Wriston.

5. James H. Carson v. Wm. Boyd and John Wilkes.

The aggregate of these was $22,854. Besides these, the Sheriff had in his hands at the time of the sale other executions of later teste, vizi:

6. Eirst Nat. Bank of Charlotte v. John Wilkes.

7. T. W. Dewey v. Y. Stirewalt, M. Martin and John Wilkes.

8. Mitcher and wife c. John Wilkes.

Of these Nos. 1, 3 and 7 are alleged by Wilkes in his affidavit t@ have been upon debts owing by the partnership ; *227 and the aggregate of these exceeded'the proceeds of the sale.

At the same term of the Court the Sheriff files what he calls a return, asking the advice of the Court, which differs from his answer to the rule, in the very important respect, that in it he says that Tie levied on and sold under the executions, only the interest of John WilTces, im the property, and that the money in his hands was derived solely from the sale of his estate. Wriston, who purchased the property, and who as surety for Wilkes was a defendant in execution No. 4, appears to the rule, and by what may be regarded as. an interplea alleges that the fund should be applied rateably to the first five named executions; because,

1. It did not appear from any of the executions that they were for partnership debts.

2. That if the land was partnership property, insomuch as the Sheriff (as appears by his return) sold only the separate estate of Wilkes, the plaintiff has no equity to any priority.

3. That the land was the separate property of Wilkes.

4. That he purchased at the sale because he had been advised by counsel that the first five executions, in one of which he was interested, would share rateably.

His Honor the Judge below, decided that he could act only on the facts as stated by the Sheriff in his return, and directed the fund to be apportioned among the first five executions, from which the plaintiff appealed. His Honor seems to have considered the return of the Sheriff referred to by Wriston, as the true return, and not the one alleged by the Sheriff in his answer to the rule; but he takes no-notice of the contradiction between them; it is singular that a doubt as to the true return should have been permitted when it could have been so easily settled by a reference to the returns to the original fi. fas. made ante litem motara, and to the returns endorsed or attached to the venditioni exponas.

The only question which in the view we take of the case *228 it is proper at this 'time to consider, is whether his Honor was right in confining himself to the Sheriff’s return.

In 2 Tidd’s Practice, 1017, it is said, “ If the property of' the goods he-'disputed, which frequently happens on a'commission of bankrupt, &c., the Court, on the suggestion of a reasonable doubt, will protect the Sheriff by enlarging the-time for making Ms return, till the right be tried between the-contending parties, or one of them Ivas gimen him a sufficient indemnity." See also, 2 Chit. Gen. Practice, 341, and Wells v. Pickman, 7 T. R., 174. But I have not found any ease-, where prior to the statute of 1 and 2 William 4, ch. 58, an English Court of law undertook either to advise the Sheriff in the appropriation of money raised under execution,' or to direct its appropriation. The assistance which the Court, gave, was confined to such as that mentioned by Tidd. In the United1 States, the Courts undertook to go farther and to pass directly on the appropriation of the money. This; seems to have been done under the idea that the Sheriff could at any time rid himself of the responsibility of an appropriation by' paying' the’ money into Court, in which case the Court would necessarily have to assume the control of' its appropriation. Turner v. Fendall, 1 Cranch 116; Acker v. Ledyard, 4 Seld 62, (N. Y.) But as' there was no 'common law process by which the Court could bring in the contending parties and compel them to'interplead, the Court was compelled to rely for' the facts exclusively on the return of the Sheriff, (Washington v. Saunders, 2 Dev. 343; Palmer v. Clark, Id. 354,) and hence'its decision could bind no one but the Shérift, for, of course, it is too clear for any difference of opinion, that no decision of a Court can bind those not parties to the proceeding, and if parties they must be at liberty to dispute the return. Hence also it followed, that unless the facts were conceded, or appeared of record, the Court, which always exercised a discretion to act according to circumstances, refused to act, and left all ■ parties to *229 tlieir remedy hy action at.law,, or by. bill, of; interpleader in. «equity, or assisted the Sheriff only as . had been the practice, in England, by allowing a farther, time for, the return, of the writ, or by compellin an indemnity. (Camp v. McCormick, 1 Denio 641, N. Y.) A fortiori, the Court -would refuse to ;advise a Sheriff, orto direct the appropriation, of the money,, where his return was uncertain, defective, or contradictory. Eor if the Court should do either in such, a cage, without being able effectually to bind the.

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Related

Griffin v. . Hasty
94 N.C. 438 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1886)
Fox v. . Kline
85 N.C. 173 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.C. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewey-v-white-nc-1871.