Ringgold v. Randolph

8 Ark. 328
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Ark. 328 (Ringgold v. Randolph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ringgold v. Randolph, 8 Ark. 328 (Ark. 1853).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Randolph recovered judgment in an action of assumpsit against Ringgold and Palmer, upon which execution issued, and was placed in the hands of the sheriff, who received from the defendants the amount of the judgment in Arkansas Bank paper; after which, and before the paper had been accepted in payment by the plaintiff in execution, the defendant, by writ of error, brought the case before this court, where, for error in the proceedings in the court below, the judgment was reversed and set aside, and the cause sent back to the circuit court for further proceedings to be had therein.

At the trial of the case in the circuit court, under the issue formed upon the plea of payment, the defendant offered the record in the first suit, the execution thereon, the return of the sheriff that the same was satisfied by the defendants by the payment of Arkansas Bank paper, and also proof that the sheriff was specially instructed by the plaintiff through his attorney to receive such paper in payment and satisfaction of the judgment, as evidence to sustain the issue on his part; but the court, on motion of the plaintiff, excluded said records and evidence from the jury!

Admitting the evidence to have been, in all other respects, unexceptionable, and that the Arkansas Bank paper, under the special authority given by the plaintiff to the sheriff to receive it, was a payment, the question is, was the money, thus collected, and remaining in the sheriff’s hands, a payment of the original demand in suit ?

So long as it remained in the sheriff’s hands by virtue of process, we think it was a payment, if not of the original demand, at least the judgment into which such demand had been merged: because, so long as the judgment and execution were in force, not set aside or reversed, the sheriff may be considered as having held it as the agent of the plaintiff as well as of the defendant. But so soon as the defendant, by suing out his writ of error and the proceedings thereon, caused the judgment to be reversed, he thereby in effect revoked the authority under which the sheriff held the money, and as he had not fully executed his power by paying over the money so collected, it remained in his hands subject to the demand of the owner. The plaintiff had no right to it, because, after the judgment had been set aside, there was no judicial sentence fixing the liability of the defendant to pay that sum.

This question was definitely settled in the case of Close v. Stewart, (4 Wend. R. 96.) It was there held that “ the reversal of a judgment, when not technically a bar to another suit, places both parties in statu quo, except as to costs and the restitution of the money paid: and that the right of the plaintiff in error to costs in error and to a return of the money becomes perfect by the reversal of the judgment, whatever may be the result of the further litigation of the parties in the new suit.” Such, we are satisfied, was the effect of the reversal of the judgment in this case. The power of the sheriff was from that time revoked, and the defendant had a right to withdraw the money which had been placed in the bands of the sheriff, not in satisfaction of the original demand, but of the judgment which had no longer a legal existence.

This being our opinion of the law, it follows that the circuit court properly refused to permit the plaintiff to introduce the evidence offered in support of the plea of payment;

Finding no error in the judgment and decision of the circuit court, the same is in all things affirmed.

The appellant filed a petition for reconsideration, which was overruled by the court:

Mr. Chief Justice Watkins

delivering the following opinion:

The appellant has petitioned for a reconsideration of the opinion of the court given in this cause at the present term. The facts of the case are briefly as follows : In March, 1841, Randolph recovered judgment against Ringgold and others in the Pulaski circuit court. Execution issued to Independence county in May, 1841, returnable to September term. The'plaintiff’s attorneys endorsed on this execution that their client had instructed them to demand good money upon it. The execution came to the sheriff’s hands on the 28th June, 1841, and, on the 29th July, he endorsed it satisfied by Ringold and Palmer by payment in Arkansas paper.

In February, 1842, the defendants sued out a writ of error to that judgment, and it was reversed at the July term, 1842. (See 4 Ark. 428.) On the remanding of the cause, Ringgold pleaded payment of the demand in suit, and, to support it, relied upon the execution issued upon the original judgment, and the sheriff’s return before stated; and upon the trial of the issue to this plea, in October, 1846, he obtained judgment, to which Randolph sued error, and this judgment was reversed at January term, 1840. (See 5 Eng. 279, overruling Ringgold vs. Edwards, 2 Eng. 87.) The reversal was upon the ground mainly discussed in the opinion, that a sheriff, against instructions or in the absence of instructions, had no authority to bind the plaintiff, or exonerate the defendant by receiving any thing but gold or silver in satisfaction of an execution. The court say that if the sheriff was authorized to receive bank paper, his return that he had received it, would be competent evidence of satisfaction, but no question was made or discussed as to the effect of such payment where the judgment, upon which it was made, had been reversed.

The cause was again remanded, and tried anew, upon the original plea of non assumpsit and this plea of payment. On the last trial, Ringgold proved that plaintiff’s attorneys, by directions from their client, wrote to the sheriff of Independence county, under date of the 18th July, 1841, authorizing him to receive Arkansas Bank paper in satisfaction of the execution, if paid in hand and without further delay. This letter came to hand on the 28th, and, on the 29th July, the sheriff received the Arkansas money, and so endorsed the execution satisfied: and it was proved, on behalf of the plaintiff, Randolph, that the money in question had not been paid to his attorneys. The record of the original judgment was in evidence showing its reversal as before stated, and, upon this state of case, the court below excluded the evidence relied upon by the defendant, namely, the letter of the plaintiff’s attorney to the sheriff, and the execution and his endorsement of satisfaction by payment of Arkansas money. The plaintiff proved Ms demand upon the issue to the plea of non as-sumpsit, and obtained judgment from which Ringgold has appealed.

The point made in the petition for reconsideration is, that the letter of instructions from the plaintiff’s attorneys to the sheriff, constituted him the special agent of the .plaintiff, who, in pursuance of his authority, accepted the Arkansas money in payment; that the debt had become merged in the judgment, and the judgment had been extinguished by the payment to the plaintiff, or, what is the same thing, to the sheriff, who, in this matter, acted, not as the officer of the law, but as the private agent of the plaintiff.

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