Love v. Williams

4 Fla. 126
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 4 Fla. 126 (Love v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. Williams, 4 Fla. 126 (Fla. 1851).

Opinions

THOMPSON, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

At the Spring term, 1850, of the Circuit Court, sitting in Gadsden County, Williams, who was plaintiff in a judgment and execution against Robert L. Harrison and others, obtained a rule against the appellant, to “ show cause why he should not pay over to the plaintiff one thousand and fifty dollars collected from the defendants.”

The appellant in his answer to the rule says: He does not know whether any execution ever eame to his hands in [133]*133the said case, but if it did come to his hands, it was destroyed by the fire which consumed the sheriff’s office on the 12th November, 1849. That the sum named in the rule was made by a seizure and sale of Harrison’s property on a fieri facias in favor of Richard H. Wilson, executor, against said Harrison, which was delivered to him on the 27th November, 1849, and that he had paid to the attorney of said Wilson $1,000, and after deducting his costs and expense in making said sale, he had in his hands the sum of $15 98.

Upon this answer, evidence was introduced, showing that the execution of Williams against Harrison and others, which was of the date of the 11th May, 1844, had been delivered to the Marshal of the Middle District on the said May 11th, 1844, and had been transferred and delivered to B. C. West, late sheriff of the County of Gadsden, on the 1st of November, 1845, and was by the said West turned over to the appellant, together with a number of other writs, a day or two prior to the fire.

Williams places his claim to this sum of money on the ground that his execution was first delivered to the sheriff and had priority, and that the money should have been paid to him, notwithstanding it was made by a seizure and sale of Harrison’s goods by virtue of the junior writ of fieri facias in favor of Wilson’s executor.

Two questions are presented for the decision of the Court upon the argument here: — First, as to the character and extent of the lien of an execution upon the goods of the debt- or ; and, secondly, whether the respondent, if he has sustained an injury, did in the Court below pursue the proper remedy in the assertion of his claim ?

1. As to the lien of the execution. At common law, the fieri facias had relation to its teste, and bound the defendant’s goods from that time, which was always some day in the term at which the judgment was entered ; but this reía[134]*134tion proving inconvenient and mischievous in practice, the goods continuing liable in the hands of those who had purchased bona fide and for a valuable consideration from the defendant, between the teste of the writ and the day of its actual issue, the statute 29th Car. II, c. 3, § 16, was intended to correct the mischief. This statute, which is of force here in this particular, enacts that “ no writ of fieri facias, or other writ of execution, shall bind the property of the goods of the party against whom such writ of execution is sued forth, but from the time such writ shall be delivered to the sheriff,” &c. See Tidd’s Practice, 1,000.

“ Neither before the statute nor since,” says Mr. Tidd, is the property in the goods altered by the delivery of the writ to the sheriff; but it continues in the defendant till execution executed.” And this, no doubt, upon the principle that a lien does not constitute, per se, a right of property in the thing itself, but a right to levy upon and sell it for satisfaction of the debt. In Lowthal v. Tompkins, 2 Equity Cases Abridged, 380, Lord Hardwicke explains what is meant by goods being bound from the delivery of the execution : that if defendant makes an assignment of his goods, unless in market overt, the sheriff may take them in execution, and this view is sustained in all the cases. We have no markets overt in this country, and therefore any sale or assignment of the defendant’s personal property, after the delivery of the fieri facias to the sheriff, is ineffectual as to the lien of the writ. But the contest here is not between the purchaser of goods from the defendant and the plaintiff in the fieri facias, but it is between the plaintiff in one execution and the sheriff, in which the former claims that the money which the latter made on another writ shall be paid to him, because, as alleged, he holds the elder writ and his lien is prior in point of time. Is this position correct ? Do the liens of different executions attach in the order of priority of the time of their respective delivery to the sheriff upon [135]*135the property of the defendant in execution, or upon the proceeds of the sale of it in the sheriff’s hands, so as to authorize a rule upon the sheriff to pay the money over as the money of the plaintiff in the first writ delivered?

It is true that all the authorities lay down the proposition that, as between different plaintiffs, if two writs of execution are delivered to the sheriff on the same or different days, he ought to execute that first which was first delivered, unless it be fraudulent or dormant; but if he executes, that is, levies and sells, by virtue of the writ last delivered, the property of the goods is bound by the sale, and the party cannot seize them by virtue of the writ first delivered. Tidd’s Practice, 1000, and authorities cited in the margin. Bradley v. Wyndham, 1 Wilson’s Reports, 44. Hunt v. Hooper, 12 Meeson & Welsby, 664. Thus, in Smallcombe v. Cross and the sheriff of London, 1 Lord Raymond, 252, the sheriff levied on the defendant’s goods under the writ last delivered and sold them to Smallcombe. By the direction of the-plaintiff in the elder writ he again levied on the same goods-under that writ and sold them to Cross. The first purchaser, though under the junior writ, brought trover for the-goods and recovered. The Court, per Holt, Chief Justice,, resolved that the sheriff has not an election to execute that writ which he pleases, but should proceed upon the writ first delivered ; yet that if he do otherwise and execute the writ last delivered first, the property of the goods is bound by the sale, and the party cannot seize them by virtue of' his execution first delivered, but may have his remedy against the sheriff. The reason given is, “ that sales made by the sheriff ought not to be defeated; for if they are, no man will buy goods levied upon a writ of execution.” And in the subsequent case of Payne v. Drewe, 4 East’s Reports, 523, 545, the case of Smallcombe v. Cross and other precedent cases were commented upon and approved; and Lord Ellenborough, in delivering, the judgment of the Court, -lays; [136]*136down the rule thus : “ that where there are several author- “ ities equally competent to bind the goods of a party when “ executed by the proper officer, that they shall be consid- ered as effectually and for all purposes bound by the au- “ thority which first actually attaches upon them in point “ of execution, and under which an execution shall have “ been first executed.”

Upon the authority of these cases it is clear that the lien of Williams’ execution did not attach upon the property, so as to defeat the sale by the sheriff under the junior writ of Wilson’s executor, for both authorities were equally competent to bind the personal property of the defendant, Harrison, and the latter having first attached in point of execution, the property is to be considered bound by it to the exclusion of all others. In Rankin v.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Fla. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-williams-fla-1851.