Harrison v. Caudle

139 S.E. 842, 141 S.C. 407, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 13, 1927
Docket12286
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 139 S.E. 842 (Harrison v. Caudle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Caudle, 139 S.E. 842, 141 S.C. 407, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 87 (S.C. 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Justice R. O. Purdy.

*411 Judgment was obtained by the respondents against the appellants on June 14, 1916, in an action which grew out of an automobile collision. Upon a summons issued by an order dated June 16, 1926, Judge Mauldin presiding, the Court renewed and revived the judgment, with leave to forthwith enter up a new judgment, including interest and costs, and to issue execution thereon.

Reciting these facts, an execution was issued against the property of the appellants on June 16, 1926. This execution was returned nulla bona by Sheriff Willis, whereupon the respondents procured an execution to be issued by the clerk of Court of Greenville County against the body of G. R. Caudle, one of the defendants, commanding the sheriff of Greenville County that:

He “do immediately take into custody .the person of G. R. Caudle, confine him, and safely keep him in the county jail for Greenville County, S. C., until he pays the judgment of $850, with interest from June 16, 1926, together with all costs that at that time may be due, or until he is otherwise discharged by law.”

The sheriff refused to make the arrest, whereupon the respondents, by their petition to the Court of Common Pleas for that County, recited the foregoing facts, prayed the Court for an order that the sheriff be required to arrest and confine G. R. Caudle in the county jail, and that the sheriff do whatever is commanded him by the clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County under the order of arrest.

This petition is supported by the affidavit of C. R. Bram-lett, deputy sheriff of the County, who stated that he took the execution to G. R. Caudle and was told by Caudle “that the same was not good, inasmuch as the property of the defendants was heavily mortgaged; the said G. R. Caudle told deponent that he had certain realty and personalty, all of which was mortgaged, and a judgment could not be made *412 out of same,” whereupon, this being reported to the sheriff, a nulla bona return was made.

On hearing this petition and affidavit, Judge Mauldin issued a rule to show cause against Sheriff Willis, why a writ of mandamus, as prayed for, should not issue, and requiring a copy of the order and petition to be served on the respondents.

It appears from the argument in the case that the sheriff did not file a written return, but appeared at the hearing. Caudle appeared by his attorney and filed a petition, which was taken as a return. In that petition, he sets forth, among other things, that he had certain rights which should be adjudicated before Judge Mauldin in the mandamus proceedings, and he prayed that he might be permitted to set up such rights and have the same adjudicated at the hearing. He alleges in his petition that the sheriff has no right or authority to arrest and confine him in the county jail under the execution, because both the petitioner and his wife, the co-defendant, own real estate of the value of $10,000, and that he owns about $1,000 worth of personal property in his own right, unincumbered except to the extent of $1,200 on the land, claiming that execution cannot issue against his person until the real estate and personal property of himself and his wife are exhausted; that the return by the sheriff was an honest mistake; and that the Court should order a further investigation as to the holdings of himself and his wife, before resorting to execution against the body of the petitioner.

The petition further alleges that the execution under which the body of the petitioner is sought to be held is unconstitutional, “in that said statute exempts females from arrest”; that since women are given full rights, the same as men, the statute is a nullity and unconstitutional, and he asks that the Court so declare. “That petitioner verily believes and has been informed that he has a meritorious defense, should the judgment creditors attempt to issue exe *413 cution against the real and personal property of petitioner and his wife, and the petitioner therefore respectfully petitions the Court to dismiss the'rule to show cause in the mandamus proceedings served upon the sheriff, to declare the execution against his body a nullity and unconstitutional, and that the sheriff be commanded and ordered to make further investigations as to petitioner’s holdings, both as to realty and personalty, and that of his wife, his co-judgment debtor, and that petitioner then be allowed to contest the right of the judgment creditors and the sheriff to proceed, with execution against their property.”

Upon hearing the matter, Judge Mauldin adjudged:

“Upon due consideration of the petition and the prayer thereof, and the record before me and the matters presented to the Court, it is ordered that the respondent, as sheriff of Greenville County, S. C., do forthwith carry into execution the order of the clerk of this Court, issued on June 25, 1926,”

—whereupon, on application to his Honor, Judge Watts, now Chief Justice, an order of supersedeas was obtained, staying the matter until the case could be heard by this Court.

It is now before this Court on a number of exceptions, which will be reported.

The first exception is too general.

The second exception sets forth that if Judge Mauldin had carefully considered the duty of the sheriff to resort, first, to the property of the debtors to satisfy the judgment, he would have been forced to the.conclusion that an execution against the person of Caudle “was not in order, irregularly brought, illegal, null, and void”; taking the further position, by exception 3, that there was error in holding that the affidavit of Bramlett, the deputy sheriff, was sufficient to overcome the verified petition or return of Caudle, is sufficient to set aside return and to warrant the Court in ordering the sheriff to arrest the person of Caudle; and, fur *414 ther, by exception 4, ignoring the fact that Mrs. Olla Caudle was jointly liable with her husband, and, if the judgment were legal, that her property was also liable for its payment, and, by exception 5, that the nulla bona return in this case was not made in the manner required by law, and was not sufficient to show that the judgment debtors did not have sufficient property the subject of levy and sale to satisfy the judgment.

All of these matters were considered by Judge Mauldin and were passed upon by him. He deemed the return insufficient and adjudged that the execution against the person of G. R. Caudle should be put into effect.

While it is manifest from the affidavit of Bramlett that the sheriff might have gone further, the sheriff accepted the statements made by the defendant Caudle that there was nothing to levy upon, and made a nulla bona return.

We think it is a matter of common knowledge that there is a generally prevalent impression to the effect that, if real estate is under mortgage and there is a judgment against the mortgagor and it is doubtful if the property will bring more than the mortgage debt, the duty of the sheriff is discharged by making a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.E. 842, 141 S.C. 407, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-caudle-sc-1927.