Ensley v. McCorkle

74 Ind. 240
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo 7293
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 74 Ind. 240 (Ensley v. McCorkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ensley v. McCorkle, 74 Ind. 240 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Woods, J.

Complaint for injunction. Judgment on demurrer to the complaint, for 'the appellees. The facts on which the injunction was prayed are substantially the following : The appellee Nancy Chandler, on the 14th day of November, 1876, obtained in the court below a decree for the foreclosure of a mortgage on real estate, against Robert and Lydia E. Titus. Robert Titus had purchased subject to the mortgage, but had not assumed the payment of the debt. There was, therefore, no personal judgment rendered in connection with the decree. Upon the order [241]*241book, immediately below the entry of the decree, the appellant had made and signed the following:

“I, William S. Ensley, acknowledge myself replevin bail for the payment of the sum of eight hundred and seventy-eight dollars and twenty-five cents, the amount mentioned, in the foregoing decree, together with accruing interest and all costs thereon, on or before the expiration of the time allowed by law for the stay of execution on the same.
“Witness my hand and seal, this 18th of December, 1876. Wm. S. Ensley. [l. s.]”

On the 28th day of May, 1877, by order of the plaintiff therein, a duly certified copy of said decree and contract of replevin bail was issued by the clerk to the sheriff, the appellee McCorkle, who, by virtue thereof, made due sale of the mortgaged premises to the appellant for the sum of one hundred dollars, which was applied in payment of the costs, and in part payment of the amount due upon the writ. Thereafter, on the 8th day of December, 1877, presumably upon request of the plaintiff in said decree, as there is noaverment to the contrary, the clerk issued to said sheriff a second writ, running in the name of the State and addressed to.the sheriff of the county,.reciting the recovery and entry of said decree and contract of replevin bail, and setting the same out by copy, and reciting the issue of a copy thereof' to the sheriff and his return’ thereon, setting them out by copies also, and concluding as follows, to wit: “And whereas-there remains unpaid upon said judgment and order of decree and interest the sum of $874.68, after the proceeds of' said sale of lands were so offered (applied?), all of which is-shown by the sheriff’s return now on file in this office, yon are therefore commanded to levy upon and sell any property of the said William S. Ensley, the replevin bail, subject to-execution, in your county, to satisfy the said unpaid part of said decree above stated, a copy of which decree is- herein [242]*242above set forth, and return this writ within. 180 daj^s from the date of the same, with your doings thereon. In witness whereof, I, Bellamy S. Sutton, clerk of said court, hereunto affix the seal thereof and subscribe my name, at Shelbyville, this the 8th day of December, A. D. 1877. Bellamy S. Sutton, Clerk.” By virtue of this writ, the sheriff had seized, and was about to sell, certain personal propei*ty of the appellant, who brought suit to enjoin the sale.

Besides the facts recited, the complaint contains an averment “that no affidavit of any kind was affixed by the plaintiff to said entry” of replevin bail, “and that the same was hever approved by the clerk of the Shelby Circuit Court, nor attested by him.” No affidavit was necessary. It is true that the code, section 385, provides that “Whenever a confession of judgment is made by power of attorney or otherwise, the party confessing shall at the time he executes such power of attorney, or confesses judgment, make affidavit that the debt is just and owing, and that such confession is not made for the purpose of defrauding his creditors ;” and, by ■section 427, “Every recognizance of bail, taken as above provided, shall have the effect of a judgment confessed, from the date thereof, against the person "and property of the bail ” We are not, however, of the opinion that any affidavit is required in connection with the contract and entry of replevin bail. The .affidavit is required, if at all, of the one ■confessing the judgment, and is manifestly inappropriate to the case of one who signs as replevin bail. He owes no debt, .and undertakes simply for the payment of the debt of another, which is already in judgment, excluding inquiry concerning its validity or the amount due thereon. We do not interpret the complaint as meaning that the clerk did not .approve or accept the bail, but simply that the entry thereof was not formally approved or attested by him, and we are not of the opinion that, for this reason, the ehtry is invalid, or of less legal effect than if there had been such formal ap[243]*243pro val. The question is, in all essential respects, the same as was decided in Miller v. McAllister, 59 Ind. 491, wherein, overruling Hougland v. The State, ex rel., 43 Ind. 537, and Fentriss v. The State, ex rel., 44 Ind. 271, it was held that the absence of an attestation by a justice of the peace, from an entry of replevin bail on a judgment rendered by such .justice, did not invalidate the entry. The reasoning of that case, based as it was on the language of the law authorizing the taking of replevin bail by justices of the peace, is equally applicable to the law and facts of this case.

The provision of the code on the subject is as follows: “Sec. 421. The bail, for stay of execution, may be taken ■and approved by the clerk, and the recognizance entered of record, at any time before the term of stay of execution expires. The undertaking in the recognizance shall be for the payment of the judgment, interest, and costs that may accrue at or before the expiration of the term of the stay of execution. The recognizance shall be written immediately following the entry of the judgment, and signed by the bail.”

There is, it will be observed, no explicit requirement of an attestation or formal approval by the clerk, and, in the absence of an unequivocal showing that the entry was made without his knowledge and approval, the existence of the entry upon the docket, which is in the exclusive control of the clerk, is sufficient proof of his approval. If it got there surreptitiously and without his consent, he would doubtless have been justified in erasing the entry, or at least in noting his disapproval.

This brings us to the main question in the case, which is stated by counsel for appellant as follows : “A judgment of foreclosure is rendered without a personal judgment; an entry of replevin bail is written and signed, immediately following the order of sale, but not approved or attested by the clerk. The order of sale is issued, and the land is sold, but not for enough to satisfy the decree. Now what are the [244]*244rights and liabilities of the parties?” Stated more succinctly, and at the same time more accurately, the question is whether the last writ issued in this case was a valid execution against the property of the appellant.

It is contended that the clerk had no power to issue an execution against the property of the appellant; that there' being no personal judgment on which an execution could issue against either defendant to the decree of foreclosure, there can be no execution against the replevin bail, unless an order of the court be obtained therefor, upon proper application and notice; that the awarding of an execution, in the absence of statutory power, is a judicial act, and not a. ministerial one ; and that no such power, in cases like this, is given the clerk by law, the statute contemplating only a joint execution against the principal and replevin bail.

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Related

Baker v. Merriam
97 Ind. 539 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
McAllister v. State ex rel. Heath
81 Ind. 256 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1881)
Miller v. O'Reilly
84 Ind. 168 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1881)
Stone v. State ex rel. Burdsall
75 Ind. 235 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
74 Ind. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ensley-v-mccorkle-ind-1881.