Scott v. Commonwealth

9 Ky. Op. 207, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 5, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ky. Op. 207 (Scott v. Commonwealth) 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
Scott v. Commonwealth, 9 Ky. Op. 207, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 126 (Ky. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Cofer:

The commonwealth of Kentucky brought this suit against J. G. Scott, late sheriff of Metcalfe county, and the sureties in his official bond to recover the amount of two executions issued from the office of the Taylor Circuit Court in favor of the plaintiff, one of them against Isaac Oaks and others for $250 and costs, and the other against Isaac Oaks alone, for $io and costs.

It was alleged that said execution, while in full force, came to the hands of Scott; that the execution defendants then resided in Metcalfe county and had sufficient estate therein, subject to execution, to satisfy said executions, and that they had been, or by the use of ordinary diligence, could have been, collected, but that the sheriff had failed to pay over to the plaintiff, or to any one authorized to receive it, the amount of said executions, or any part of the same, and had, without reasonable excuse therefor, failed for more than thirty days after the return day of said executions, to return them or either of them to the office whence they issued.

The defendants denied that any part of either of said executions had been, or could by any degree of diligence have been, collected. They also averred that the sheriff, being unable to find any property in his county subject to said executions, indorsed that fact on each of them and placed them in an envelope directed to the clerk of the Taylor Circuit Court, and deposited them in the post-office at the time they were made returnable.

The sureties also averred that Merida Wilson was a cosurety with them on the official bond of Scott, and'that on the 4th day of March, 1871, Wilson gave written notice to said Scott that he was unwilling to remain longer bound on said bond; that thereupon, on motion of said Wilson before the county court of Metcalfe county, an order was made by said county court ruling and requiring said Scott to appear before said court within ten days and give additional security on said bond, which rule was served and returned; that upon said Scott’s failure to respond to said rule an order was made [209]*209by the court releasing Wilson from any further liability on said bond; and that afterwards the name of John H. Scott was signed, to the bond, and his name was interlined and added to the order on the county court order book, approving and accepting the bond, to supply the place of the name of Wilson. The executions in question having been received by Scott, after the order releasing Wilson, and after the name of John H. Scott was signed to the bond and his name interlined -on the order book, they relied upon these facts as discharging them from all further liability on the bond sued on.

A verdict and judgment having been rendered against Scott and all the sureties, except Wilson, this appeal is prosecuted to reverse that judgment. The appellants asked three instructions which were refused. In the first of the rejected instructions, which is marked “C,” the court was asked to tell the jury that if it believed from the evidence Merida Wilson had been released, by an order of the county court, from all liability as surety on the sheriff’s bond, it ought to find for all the sureties. In a previous instruction, asked by Wilson, and given by-'the court, the jury was told that he was released from all liability, and the effect of giving the instruction asked by appellants would have been to require the jury to find for them all, and consequently the instruction was properly refused unless the release of Wilson, if he was released, had the effect to release all the sureties.

The statute then in force (Secs. 1 and 2, Chap. 97, Rev. Stat.) provided that whefi a surety, for good cause, wished to be relieved from further liability as such,-in the official bond of any officer, he might, by written notice to the officer, require him by a named day to appear and give a new bond, with other surety, before the court in which, or in whose clerk’s office, the original was given or was kept, and that in case a new bond was given the surety should not be bound for any act of the principal thereafter. If the officer failed to give a new bond the statute declared that he should, by order of the court, he removed from his office.

The statute gave no authority for making an order such as was made releasing Wilson from further liability. It provided that if a new bond was given he should be released, and if no such bond was given the court should remove the sheriff from office, but did not declare what should be the result if neither of these things were done. It may therefore well be doubted whether Wilson did not continue liable. The notice is not copied into the record, nor does the record from the county court show that the court adjudged that [210]*210good cause was shown; but on the contrary it appears that the order requiring- a new bond was made because the sheriff made default by failing to respond to the rule. The proceeding was therefore quite defective, if not void. Lemon v. Peck, 13 B. Mon. 393.

But even if Wilson was released, we think the other sureties were not released. If he was released it was the act of the law, and the sureties, when they signed the bond, did so subject to the right of each to be discharged in the manner in which Wilson was released, and if he was not released of course they have no ground of complaint. The court therefore properly held that the appellants were liable, if the case was made out in other respects, and properly refused instruction “C.”

Instruction “D” was properly refused on more than one ground. By its terms the liability of the sheriff and his sureties would have been made to depend not upon the question whether the defendants in the execution had property in the sheriff’s bailiwick out of which the whole or some part of the execution could have been made, but upon the question whether he used due diligence in endeavoring to collect the execution. The statute was and is now peremptory, and a sheriff or other like officer into whose hands an execution is placed to do execution thereof, who’ fails to return the same to the office whence it issued within thirty da3'S after the return day of the same, without reasonable excuse for such failure, shall, with his sureties, be liable to the plaintiff in such execution for the amount thereof, and thirty per centum damages thereon and costs of recovery. But that rule does not apply where the defendant had no property in the county, out of which the execution or any part of it could have been made; but in such case the liability is for thirty per centum on the amount of the execution. Sec. 4, Art. 18, Chap. 36, Rev. Stat., and Secs. 5, 6, 7, Art. 17, Chap. 38, Gen. Stat.

The statute does not excuse the sheriff, or his sureties, for his failure to return the execution upon its being made to appear that he used due diligence to collect it. Diligence in endeavoring to collect is of no avail in such a case. No matter what his diligence in that respect may have been, he and his sureties will be liable except the defendant in execution was without property in the county subject to seizure under it.

Another objection to the instruction is that it authorized the jury to consider evidence tending to show that the sheriff had put the executions in an envelope directed to the clerk of the Taylor Circuit Court, but had by inadvertence and oversight neglected to put it in [211]*211the post-office. No such excuse was pleaded, and it could not therefore be considered by the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ky. Op. 207, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1877.