Richardson v. Bartley

41 Ky. 328, 2 B. Mon. 328, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 7, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 Ky. 328 (Richardson v. Bartley) 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
Richardson v. Bartley, 41 Ky. 328, 2 B. Mon. 328, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 40 (Ky. Ct. App. 1842).

Opinion

Judge Ewing

delivered tbe Opinion of the Court—the Chief Justice did not sit in this case.

Twenty-two executions issued from the Clerk’s office of the Greenup Circuit Court, on recognizances having the force of replevin bonds, in favor of different creditors against John and David Trimble and John T. Woodrow, indorsed “no security of any kind to betaken,” and were placed in the hands of R. M. Briggs, D. S. for •James Bartley, Sheriff of Greenup county, in October, 1839, returnable to the December rules following. These executions, while in full force, were all levied on the real •and personal estate of John and David Trimble, and John T. Woodrow, on the 12th December, and the personal estate left in their custody. On the 23d December [329]*329the deputy took from them bonds with security,' in the form of forthcoming bonds, for the delivery of the property on the day of sale. The deputy returned the executions to the office with a return that he had levied them, and a specification of the property levied on attached, “all of which remained in his hands unsold,” upon which twenty-two writs of venditioni exponas issued on the 9th January, 1840, by virtue of which the defendants, the Sheriff and his deputies, took possession of the property levied on, and sold the same in satisfaction of the executions. David and John Trimble after the levy, to-wit, on the 30th December, 1839, transferred to Richardson & Letcher, as trustees for themselves and other creditors, the whole of the property levied on, and they instituted this action, it being an action of trover and conversion, for the personal property so levied on and sold, and having failed in the Court below have appealed to this Court.

Grounds relied on for reversal. Wherever a Sheriffmayrightfullytake aforthcomingbond and doesso,theproyerty levied on is released, and cannot be retaken -without a new execution on the forthcoming bond—argu. Where an execution is endorsed that “no security of any kind is to be taken” the officer has no right to take a delivery bond, and if taken it cannot be made the basis of an execution.

[329]*329They insist, that by leaving the property in the hands of the defendants in the executions and-taking the bonds, it was released from the levy, and was lawfully transferred to them, and that or any other property of the defendants could not be taken and sold, except upon new executions issuing on the forthcoming bonds or the recognizances; and this presents the main question for the consideration of this Court.

We may concede that when an officer may lawfully take a statutory forthcoming bond, that by taking the same the property is discharged from the levy, and if not delivered cannot be retaken by the officer, except upon new process issuing upon the forthcoming bond, because this is the mode provided by the statute for making the debt, and no other perhaps can be rightfully pursued. And in such a state of case, the bond being forfeited, &c. the defendants and their sureties being both liable to the new process, might perhaps be at liberty to dispose of the property levied on as well as any other prop, erty, at any time before the -new execution was placed in the hands of the officer. But if this be true, which is not necessary now to be decided, and which we do not decide, the executions being endorsed “that no security [330]*330of any kind is to be taken,” the officer had no right to take a statutory bond, and if taken, it could not be returned and made the basis of an execution. If taken in such a case it could only be taken for his own indemnity and treated as a common law bond, for which purpose he insists it was taken in this case. To allow it to be treated as a statutory bond, notwithstanding the indorsement, would be to lay down a rule by which there might be no end to the execution, as the indorsement required to be made on an execution issuing on a forthcoming bond, is precisely the same as that required to be indorsed on an execution issuing on a recognizance or replevin bond; and if, in the latter case, he might take a statutory forthcoming bond upon which a new execution must issue, so he might, notwithstanding the indorsement, take a new bond from time to time in the former case, and upon which new process must be issued.

The 14th see. of the act of 1828, Stat. Law, 641, construed. Also the statute •of 1821, Stat. Law, 508.

The 14th sec. of the act of 1828, Stat. Laws, 1st, 641, which provides for taking forthcoming bonds, looks to the prior provisions of the statute, and was intended to provide for such bonds on executions issuing on original judgments only, such executions having been provided for in the previous sections, and must be so construed to make it stand consistently with the subsequent and 16th Sec. which authorizes a replevin, and provides for an indorsement on the execution that ‘ ‘no security of any kind is to he taken.”

Nor do we find any thing in the previous statutes on this subject to lead us to a different conclusion as to the effect of the indorsement required in this act. The provisions of the statute of 1821, 1 Dig. of the Stat. 508, were intended to coerce from the creditor an indorsement upon his execution, that Commonwealth’s paper would be received, and were temporary in their operation, and were not made to apply to any case where the required indorsement for paper was made; they are superseded by the statute of 1828, which required no such indorsement upon subsequent judgments, or on executions issuing under its provisions as well as by the termination of the charter of the Commonwealth’s Bank [331]*331and a withdrawal of its paper from circulation, and an entire change in the policy of the country.

A Sheriff having an execution and levying it on personal property, is vested with a special property, and he may commit the safe keeping thereof to any agent he may select, the defendant in the' execution as well as any other, and take bond for its faithful surrender, and the possession of such agent is his possession, and he may resume it at pleasure, and the bond is obligatory between them as a commpn law-bond.

But in cases where the indorsement is made as well as any other, we cannot doubt that the officer may, at his own wish, entrust the care and keeping of the property levied on to others, and if he chooses to risk it he may entrust it to the defendants in the execution—in either case they are his mere bailees and keepers of the property, and their possession is his possession: Bl. Com. 2, 396; 2 Saund. 47 a noté, &c. He has by virtue of the levy a special property in the goods, by reason of his responsibility to the plaintiff for their value, and may sue for them in trespass or trover: 2 Saund. 4f>, Wilberham vs Snow, and the notes. His taking a bond for his own indemnity cannot render his condition worse, or change his relation to his bailees or his rights over the property. If he have a special property in the goods and may sue for them, he may also, with or without a venditioni exponas, take possession and sell them without being subject to an action.

It is said in 2 Saund. 47, note c, founded upon the case of Blades vs Arundle, 1 M. & S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Ky. 328, 2 B. Mon. 328, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-bartley-kyctapp-1842.