Nash v. Muldoon

16 Nev. 404
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1882
DocketNo. 1,094
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 Nev. 404 (Nash v. Muldoon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash v. Muldoon, 16 Nev. 404 (Neb. 1882).

Opinion

By the Court,

Belknap, J.

The plaintiffs, having severally obtained judgments against the defendant, thereafter moved in the court below to recover from the sheriff and his sureties the moneys collected under executions issued upon said judgments, together with the penalties imposed by the law for delinquency in such cases. The statute upon the subject reads as follows: “If a sheriff shall neglect or refuse to pay over on, demand to the person entitled, any money which may come into his hands -by virtue of his office, after deducting his legal fees, the amount thereof, with twenty-five per cent, damages, and interest at the rate of ten per cent, per month fr(om the time of the demand, may be recovered by such person from him and the sureties on his official bond, on application, upon five days’ notice to the court in which the action is brought, or the judge thereof in vacation.” (Sec. 2961, Comp. L.) The motions were consolidated for the purpose of trial. Judgments were rendered in favor of defendants. It was proven that on the twenty-first day of November, 1879, plaintiffs, Nash and Kennedy, recovered judgments against defendant Muldoon, aggregating the sum of two thousand six hundred and fifty-three dollars and fifty cents. On the fourth day of December following the sheriff sold certain wagons, animals, and hay, under -writs of execution issued upon these judgments, and upon said sale received the sum of five hundred and twenty-seven dollars Afterward, and on the twelfth day of June, 1880, under alias ex[409]*409ecutions issued in each case on the' second day of June, the sheriff sold a quantity of cordwood, and- received therefor the sum of two thousand and nine-dollar's. Thus, upon the two sales the sheriff received the sum, of two thousand five hundred and thirty-six dollars. v.

It was proven that he had discharged preferred labor liens upon the property to the am dip. t' of two hundred and eighty-six dollars and ninety cents,-1 for' which he was entitled to credit, and that he was entitled .to retain the sum of four hundred and twelve dollars an d's fifty-five cents, forhis fees, commissions, and other expenses. Deducting the aggregate of those amounts, to wit,"six, hundred and ninety-nine dollars and forty-five cents, frbm the total amount received, the balance, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six dollars and fifty-five cents, is- the principal sum plaintiffs were entitled to recover.

The sheriff has offered sufficieotM’easons for failing to pay five hundred and thirty-six dollars ánct eighty-eight cents of, this sum to excuse himself and sureties to this extent frpm the penalties imposed by th-e^-.átáfuie; forty-eight dollars and fifty cents of the five hundred and thirty-six dollars-and eighty-eight cents is charged by the sheriff as expenses attending the keeping and sale" of the property. These items are objected to forthe reason that they were not-approved by the certificate of .the..district judge as required by the statute. The law fixes -the fees of- the sheriff, and also allows him “such further- compensation for his trouble and expense in taking ,poss©ssion-of property under attachment or execution, or other .process, and of preserving the same, as' the court from Which the writ or order may issue shall certify to be just' and reasonable.” (Stats. 1875,148.)

The sheriff also paid the preferred-lab or liens of McRae for one hundred and fifty-six dollars, of McLennan for one hundred and eighty dollars, of Armstrong for forty-one dollars, and of Burgeoin for one hundred) and eleven dollars and thirty-eight cents. The ■ plaintiffs disputed the lien claims of McRae and McLennan;;,a'nd^-notified the sheriff not to pay either of them. Nevertheless' he did pay them, [410]*410notwithstanding no action was commenced to enforce them. Neither of the plaintiffs nor their attorney had any notice of the lien claims of Armstrong or Burgeoin, nor was any action brought to establish either of. them. The sheriff clearly erred in paying the liens of McRae and McLennan, nor was he warranted in paying those of Armstrong or Bur-geoin. (Coscia v. Kyle, 15 Nev. 395.) Nor was he entitled to deduct from the moneys due the judgment creditors the expenses incurred in preserving the property levied upon, except such matters as may have been certified by the district judge as having been just and reasonable. (Geil v. Stevens, 48 Cal. 590; Lane v. McElhany, 49 Id. 421.)

The payment of the lien claims and the withholding of the charge of forty-eight dollars and fifty cents appear to have been errors of judgment rather than willful or corrupt acts upon the part of the officer, and as the penalties provided by the statute were intended as punishment for intentional wrongdoing, and not for mistakes made in good faith, we are of opinion that whilst plaintiffs are entitled 'to recover these items no penalty should be imposed for the delinquency. At the sale which took place on the twelfth day of June, the judgment creditors severally purchased cord-wood. No money was paid by either of them on account of such .purchase, each creditor apparently intending that his bid should be credited upon his execution. The sheriff, however, needed money, not only for his own fees and disbursements, but to discharge labor liens upon the property.

Accordingly he and his deputy demanded payment of money for these purposes, and they suggested.that plaintiffs transfer their bids. Negotiations were entered into between the plaintiffs' and one Freeman McComber, in which the sheriff and his deputy took an active part. The result of their negotiations is claimed by respondents to have been a sale of the wood by plaintiffs to McComber, whilst appellants claim that it was simply a transfer of their respective bids made at the execution sale.

The distinction to be made is important in view of the payments made by McComber to the sheriff. If it was a sale, respondents claim that the sheriff received the money [411]*411as the agent of plaintiffs and no.t in-’his official capacity, and the sureties on his official bond are not liable. But we are of the opinion that the view of the appellants upon this question is correct, and that the transaction was a transfer of bids. The testimony of every witness who was interrogated relative ,to this transaction goes to establish the fact that it was a transfer of bids rather than a sale from plaintiffs to McComber.

Elstner, the deputy sheriff, who had previously told plaintiffs that they must “either pay, sell the Avood, or transfer the bids,” testified that afterwards McComber came into the sheriff’s office and said, that the bids had been transferred, and requested him to do theAvriting, and thereupon he drew the writings which it is ■ claimed shoAV the transaction to have been a sale.-; "The following day Mc-Ooraber paid the sheriff the sum of one thousand one hundred dollars, and the sheriff requested Elstner to write a receipt for the full' amount on the “ Kennedy and Nash executions.” The Avriting is as follows:

“I have this fifteenth day of June,-. 1880, by the order of Thomas Nash and Mary A. Kennedy, gave the possession of the Avood at the ranch known as John Muldoon’s wood ranch to Freeman McComber, and they, the said Kennedy and Nash, transferring their bid and all rights thereto, and directing me as above to do. “.Lloyd Hill, Sheriff.
“Per M. E. Elstner, Deputy Sheriff.”
“Deceived June 16,1880, of Freeman McComber, on the aboye Avood, one thousand one hu'iidfed dollars.

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16 Nev. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-muldoon-nev-1882.