Heilig v. . Lemley

74 N.C. 250
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 N.C. 250 (Heilig v. . Lemley) 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
Heilig v. . Lemley, 74 N.C. 250 (N.C. 1876).

Opinion

RodmAN. J.

The question is whether a Sheriff who has made himself liable to a plaintiff by his negligent delay in collecting an execution, and who pays off the debt in his own exoneration and takes an assignment from the plaintiff to a third persan in trust for himself, has thereby extinguished the judgment, so that he cannot have an alias execution issued to another officer upon it ?

The cases cited by the learned counsel for the defendants from New York do certainly establish that, in that State, upon grounds of public policy, the judgment is absolutely extinguished. Re ed v. Pruyn, 7 Johns., 426; Sherman v. Boyce, 15 Johns., 443; Bigelow v. Provost, 5 Hill, 566, and others which may be found cited in a note to Herman on Executions, 205. Nor is this doctrine confined to New York. It is so held in Alabama: Rountree v. Weaver, 8 Ala., 314; Boren v. McGehee, 6 Porter, 432; Crutchfield v. Haynes, 14 Ala., 49; in Tennessee, Smith v. Herman, 1 Cold., 141; but see Lintry v. Thompson, 1 Head, 456; in Missouri, Garth v. Campbell, 10 Mo., 154; in Maine and Massachusetts, unless the Sheriff takes an assignment from the plaintiff, the judg *252 ment is extinguished, but if he does, it is not. Whittier v. Heimingway, 22 Me., 238; Allen v. Holden, 2 Mass., 133; Dunn v. Snell, 15 Mass., 481. So in Georgia, Arnett v. Cloud, 2 Ga., 53 ; and perhaps in some other States.

The foundation of all these cases seems to be that of Reed v. Pruyn. In that case the Sheriff having a ea. sa. against "Staats, under which Staats was arrested, procured him and Eruyn to -confess a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for a larger sum, and the Sheriff paid the amount of the execution to the plaintiff. In a few days he took out a ca. sa. on the judgment -confessed by Staats and Pruyn, and took their note for a still larger sum, and gave them a receipt for the amount of the first judgment. Afterwards the Sheriff advei’tised the property of Pruyn and Staats- for sale under an execution rq>on the judgment confessed, and they moved to set aside the ■execution, and for an entry of satisfaction on the judgment -confessed. The court granted the motion, and there can be no- doubt was right in doing so.

A sheriff who has an execution against a defendant and as 'the price of indulgence takes from him a judgment confessed, -or a note, for a larger sum, isj guilty of oppression and of a breach of official duty, and on grounds of public policy such Judgment confessed, or note, must be held void, notwithstanding- the sheriff has paid the plaintiff in the original judgment the amount of his claim. And a fortiori any acts of the sheriff after he had acquired his interest, under an execution whether issued upon the original judgment confessed, were in like manner void as to the defendant in the execution. This last proposition has long been settled. Bat. Eev. chap. 25, Coroner; chap. 106, Sheriff; Brown v Jones, 3 Ired. 25; McLeod v McCall, 3 Jones 87; Stewart v Rutherford, 4 Jones 483. And the first we conceive to be equally clear upon general principles. See also Bat. Rev. chap. 106, sec. 17.

K®Nt, J., in delivering the opinion of the court (after citing •the cases of Wallace v Weedale, Noy. 107: Langdon v Wallis, *253 Lutw. 587; Speake v Richards, Hob. 206, and Ward v Hauchet, 1 Keb. 551,) says, “The practice of sheriffs of paying executions themselves, and taking security and judgment bonds from the party over whom they have at the time such-means of coercion is to be strictly and vigilantly watched by the courts. Such humanity is imposing, hut it may be turned into cruelty. Nothing is more important to the honor of the.administration of justice, than that the officers of the court should not use its process as the means of making unequal bargains, and taking undue advantage. The facts in this case have the appearance of an instance of gross abuse.”

He .concludes by saying, “I am happy therefore that the sheriff will be driven to seek his remedy upon the note, when the legality of the increase of the original debt will be open, to further investigation.”

We think that in the subsequent cases in New York, and in the others elsewhere that have followed this case, the opinion, of the eminent Judge has been misconceived, and an extension given to it which was not intended, and which cannot be supported by reason. An opinion applicable to a special case,, has been converted into a general and arbitrary rule.

In the present case, the sheriff having an execution against the defendant paid it to the plaintiff in his own exoneration and took an assignment on the execution to his son, whether-as a trustee for himself, or as a gift to the son, is not materials He now moves that an alias execution may issue to his successor in office, for his benefit. There has been no oppression a& there clearly was in the case of Reed v. Pruyn, and the debt has not been increased.

We are at a loss to conceive what public policy will be violated if the motion is allowed.

It is said that if a sheriff can escape amercement by paying an execution which it was his duty to collect, he will be induced to delay enforcing executions, and creditors may be injured. The creditor cannot be injured if the debt is paid.. *254 And it cannot be a wrong to tlie debtor if a sheriff who, relying perhaps on his promise to pay the money by the return day, has made himself liable by his indulgence, is allowed after payment to stand in the position of the creditor. If public policy forbids such payments by sheriffs, and for that reason the judgment is extinguished, it would seem that the same principle would forbid any recovery by the sheriff „ of' the money so paid by him. But the principal case we have commented on, holds that the sheriff might sue upon the note which he had taken, and recover what might be just.

It is also said in Roundtree v. Weaver, that the sheriff in an action against the defendant can recover the money paid for his benefit. And in Lintz v. Thompson it is said that if the sheriff is compelled to pay the debt by a judgment of a court, there is an implied transfer of the plaintiff’s debt to him. These cases thus acknowledge that it would be inequitable for a defendant to receive the benefit of the sheriff’s payment, and refuse to re-imburse him.

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74 N.C. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heilig-v-lemley-nc-1876.