M'Ghee v. Ellis

14 Ky. 244, 4 Litt. 244, 1823 Ky. LEXIS 171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 22, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 14 Ky. 244 (M'Ghee v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M'Ghee v. Ellis, 14 Ky. 244, 4 Litt. 244, 1823 Ky. LEXIS 171 (Ky. Ct. App. 1823).

Opinion

Ofmiosopm Court, by

Judge Miles.

Under an execution in favor of M'Ghee, (the plain" tiff in error,) against Micajah Browning, the sheriff seized and sold a negro boy slave, as the property of Browning, and Elljs, the defendant in error, became the purchaser, at three months’’ credit, and executed his bond with security, to M’Ghee, for the price thereof, in the usual form. Shortly afterwards. James Brown, who claimed the slave as his, by title paramount to that of Browning, brought his action of detinue for the slave, against Ellis, and recovered. Ellis then exhibited this bill against both M’Ghee and Browning, with injunction against his bond for the purchase money, praying a perpetual injunction, which the court granted by a final decree; to reverse which,. M’Ghee has prosecuted this writ of error.

.There can be no doubt, from the testimony in the' cause, that the slave was the property of Brown, and that he had sent the slave to attend his daughter, Mrs. Browning,'home, when she was on a visit at his bjfeise, under a promise from her that he should be restored in two weeks, he, Brown, living in a distant county. While th? slave was at Browning’s the sheriff seized and [245]*245®kl him, and M’Ghce, who had placed his execution in the hands of the officer, to pursue his legal remedy, gave no directions about the sale, and ha4*¿Mfeinterfe-ronce with it, arid denies that he knew of th^lkle until after it m&s over. ■ -

Thodcfond’t. ^ ;sejjay¡ ju equity, on üie ground ^fhluícbihae j,cen' <i¿char-god by the 5,ot unless ho was prupajqySb<£ ing taken, ^"heriff’s’ return that he bus col- *° plaintiff’s judgment, or of thu deferí (hint to that ’ ho ?et m-ido by a decree quenUy arcr-petual hurt» *|dn°rout an.'other excem.'. tion I’m-ü.

The case thus stated, present's the single question, whether a creditor or plaintiff in an execution is bound to refund to the purchaser the price of property sold under execution, when the title -proves defective; or, in other words, is a creditor, who barely pursues his legal remedy, without controlling in $my way, the acts of the sheriff, bound, by an implied warranty, to make good the title of goods or chattels sold under tHe tioil?

It is somewhat singular, that sheriffs and sales under execution should exist in our code of laws for so many centimes, and that wherever such sales exist, this ques-lion might, in the ordinary course of things, so frequently occur, and yet there should he so little said in the books on this subject; for, in the search made by this court, which is not very inconsiderable, we have not been able to find a single adjudicated case on the point. We have, thcrelore, been led to take it up measurably on principle, and examine and adjudicate as the reason of the case may guide us.

It would be hazarding too much, to say that all goods sold under execution, passed without any warranty of title, and that, in every instance, the purchaser runs the risk of title, and can have no redress for the loss of his money. On the contrary, we have no doubt that there is a responsibility somewhere, to which lie may resort, in case his title proves defective. If such liability ists, it must either be against the ci editor, (as the court below has decided in this case,) or against the debtor, whose debt is discharged by the sale, or against the sheriff, who seized and made the sale.

And first, what is the situation of the debtor? By his own act in creating the debt, and then refusing to discharge it, he is guilty of a wrong upon the credil or, which subjects him to legal process and the sentence the constituted authorities of his country, that he shall the debt. The sheriff, with the judicial process in his hand, seeks his estate, and perhaps acting honestly and innocently, takes, by mistake, the estate of another, and exposes it to sale. By the act of sale and the re[246]*246turn of tile officer, Ms debt is discharged, hia wrong against his creditor is purged, and the creditor is- es-topped %the return from again resorting to the judg-orient. To the judgment, and also the proceeding under the execution, both he and tile creditor arfe parties, and while that remains, in force, each is concluded by the return, as was decided by this court in the caso of Smith vs. Hornback, Reed and others

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ky. 244, 4 Litt. 244, 1823 Ky. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mghee-v-ellis-kyctapp-1823.