Ex parte Ringgold

20 F. Cas. 810, 3 D.C. 86, 3 Cranch 86
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedApril 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 810 (Ex parte Ringgold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Ringgold, 20 F. Cas. 810, 3 D.C. 86, 3 Cranch 86 (circtddc 1827).

Opinion

CRanch, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

■ This order is supposed to have been made under the Act of Virginia, December 13,1792, § 61, p. 167, which provides that if all the executors shall refuse, &c., or, in case of an intestate estate, if no person will apply for administration, “ it shall be lawful for the general court, or other court having jurisdiction of such probat or administration, after the expiration of three months from the death of the testator or intestate, to order the sheriff or other officer of the county or corporation to take the estate into his possession and make sale of so much thereof, at public auction, as the payment of debts shall make necessary; or as shall be perishable, or be directed by will, to be sold; and all sales and conveyances bond fide made by the sheriff or his deputies, or other officer, in consequence of such order, shall be as effectual to the purchasers as if they had been made by the testator in [87]*87his lifetime. The estate shall be sold upon such credit as the Court shall direct, and upon public notice previously given ; the purchasers giving bond and good security for payment according to the limited time of credit.” .

He is also authorized to sue for debts or property due to the deceased, and required to return to the court an inventory and account of sales, and the bonds taken from purchasers &c.

Without inquiring whether the marshal is bound to obey the order of the Orphans’ Court; if made in a case within the terms of the Act of Virginia, it may be observed that it does not appear in the record that Robert Young died in the county of Alexandria, or left any estate therein; nor whether he died testate or intestate; nor, if testate, that all the executors refused to act or to give bond; nor if intestate, that no person had applied for administration; nor that three months had expired since the death of Mr. Young; all which facts ought to have been ascertained before the order could be regularly made. We think, therefore, that the sentence of the Orphans’ Court might be reversed upon that ground. But as it is understood that the parties concerned wish to obtain the opinion of the Cour,t upon the question whether the marshal is bound to obey such an order in any case which can be made under the Act of Virginia, we are willing to consider that questiqn.

The first objection to the order, is, that the marshal is not a county or corporation officer, but the officer of the whole district; and the Orphans’ Court could only make the order to some officer of the county or corporation. This seems to us to be a valid objection. It is not a duty devolved upon the sheriff of any county, as such. He is only designated as one of the officers whom the court may, under the Act of Virginia, order to make the sale; but the court may appoint any other officer of the county, or even of the corporation.

It is said that the marshal is bound to perform, in the respective counties of this district, all the duties which the sheriffs in Virginia and Maryland, respectively, were bound to perform in their respective counties on the 27th of February, 1801, when the jurisdiction of those States ceased over this district; and that the laws of Virginia, then in force in the county of Fairfax, continued to be in force in the county of Alexandria. It is said also that there are certain fees, given to the sheriff in Virginia, which the marshal' has claimed here, and which he can only claim by identifying himself with the sheriff; and that he has been in the habit of performing certain duties which he could not perform, nor be compelled to perform unless by a similar identification. That by the first section of the Act of Congress [88]*88of March 3d, 1801, [2 Stat. at Large, 115,] officers “ for whom no special provision is made ” by that act, or the Act of February 27th, 1801, [2 Stat. at Large, 103,) “shall receive the same fees and emoluments as they have respectively received under the jurisdiction of the respective states; ” and it is intimated that the marshal, under that clause of the act, charges, for summoning a coroner’s jury, by order of the coroner, the same fee as the sheriff of Virginia does. But that clause of the act does not affect the marshal because he is an officer for whom special provision is made ” by the Act of February 27th, 1801, § 9. (2 Stat. at Large, 103.)

By the Virginia law of November 29th, 1792, Rev. Code, § 6, p. 125, the coroner is to issue his precept to the sheriff, sergeant of a corporation, or constable of the county or corporation, directing him to summon at least twelve freeholders,” &c.

If the marshal has executed such precepts, it does not follow that he was bound to do so, nor that he could lawfully demand fees for executing them.

By the Act of Congress of March 3,1807, [2 Stat. at Large, 430,] the marshal is entitled to receive “for such services” in Alexandria county, “ as are not enumerated in that, or some, other act of Congress, the like fees as by the laws of Virginia, prior to the first Monday in December 1800, were allowed to a sheriff of a county for like services.”

By this act, he receives his fees, not because he is identified with the sheriff of Virginia, but because the act gives him, as marshal, the like fees as a sheriff in Virginia would have .received for like services. There is no act of Congress which declares that he shall perform all the duties required of a sheriff under the laws of Virginia.

It is said also that the marshal executes the process of the Orphans’ Court, and charges the fees allowed, by the laws of the States, to the sheriffs. These fees he is entitled to receive under the Act of March 3, 1801, [2 Stat. at Large, 115,] or the Act of February 27, 1801, [2 Stat. at Large, 103.]

By the Judiciary Act of September 24, 1789, § 27, [1 Stat. at Large, 73,] it is the duty of the marshal “ to execute, throughout the district, all lawful precepts,"directed to him, and issued under the authority of the United States.

Whatever process he executes, or whatever fees he receives, he executes and receives as marshal, and under the authority of the United States.

By the seventh section of the Act of Congress of February 27, Í801, “ concerning the District of Columbia ” it is enacted, That there shall be a marshal for the said district, who shall [89]*89have the custody of the jails of the said counties, and be accountable for the safe-keeping of all prisoners legally committed therein; and he shall be appointed for the same term, shall take the same oath, give a bond with sureties in the same manner, shall have, generally, within the said district, the same powers, and perform the same duties, as is by law directed and provided in the case of marshals of the United States. And by the ninth section of the same act, he was entitled to receive, for his services, the same fees which were by law allowed to the marshal of the district of Maryland.

By the twenty-seventh section of the Judiciary Act of September 24, 1789, the duties of a marshal are thus described: — Whose duty it shall be to attend the District and Circuit Courts, when sitting therein, and also the Supreme Court in the district in which that court shall sit; and to execute throughout the district, all lawful precepts directed to him, and issued under the authority of the United States; and he shall have power to command all necessary assistance in the execution of his duty; and to appoint, as.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 810, 3 D.C. 86, 3 Cranch 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-ringgold-circtddc-1827.