Skulason v. Pratt

130 P.2d 17, 169 Or. 617, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 102
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 130 P.2d 17 (Skulason v. Pratt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skulason v. Pratt, 130 P.2d 17, 169 Or. 617, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 102 (Or. 1942).

Opinion

BELT, J.

This is aji action to recover damages resulting from the alleged negligence of the defendant sheriff in serving and executing a writ of assistance issued for the purpose of ousting a judgment debtor from possession of a dwelling house and lot in the city of Portland. The corporation was made defendant by reason of its being surety on the official bond of the sheriff. The cause was submitted to the trial court, without the intervention of a jury, and a judgment rendered in favor of defendants.

The action arose out of the following facts: On the 9th day of November, 1938, a judgment was rendered in a suit to foreclose certain mechanics’ *619 liens wherein the Drake Lumber and Fuel Co., a corporation, was plaintiff. Eva V. Kelso, The First National Bank of Portland, B. Gr. Skulason and other lienholders were named as defendants. It was decreed therein that the Drake Lumber and Fuel Co. had a first lien, aggregating in excess of $4,000, on the property which was valued at approximately $10,000. It was also decreed that the mortgage lien of the bank, amounting to $1,500, was second in priority and that the lien of B. Gr. Skulason, plaintiff herein, amounting to $8,114.20 for money advanced to Eva V. Kelso to cover cost of construction of dwelling house, was third in priority. The property was sold upon execution on January 9th, 1939, to satisfy the judgments rendered in favor of the various lienholders in order of their priority as above stated. The Drake Lumber and Fuel Co. was purchaser at the sale and a sheriff’s certificate of sale was duly issued to it. The sale was confirmed on January 23, 1939. After entry of the decree and prior to the execution sale, it was agreed between the plaintiff herein, B. Gr. Skulason, and the various lien-holders above named that the Drake Lumber and Fuel Co. would bid in the property for and on behalf of all lien claimants and that, after sale, the plaintiff herein would pay the various lien claimants the amounts of their respective judgments, whereupon the sheriff’s certificate of sale would be assigned to Skulason.

It appears that Mr. Skulason did not possess sufficient funds to consummate the deal immediately so money was borrowed by him from L. Grace Vial for such purpose, it being understood between them that the certificate should be taken in her name as security for the loan. Pursuant to such understanding and agreement, Skulason paid off the lien claimants in full and *620 the certificate of sale was assigned by the Drake Lumber and Fuel Co. to L. Grace Vial on February 27,1939. Thereafter, Skulason paid the amount due L. Grace Vial and on the 27th day of February, 1940, she assigned the certificate of sale to the Skulason Finance Company, a corporation, in which Skulason, the plaintiff herein, was the sole owner of the stock. A declaration of trust was introduced in evidence showing that the Skulason Finance Company held the certificate of sale in trust for the plaintiff herein and that he was the owner thereof.

Eva Kelso, the judgment debtor, refused to surrender possession of the property after execution sale, notwithstanding various attempts made by Mr. Arthur Lewis, attorney for Drake Lumber and Fuel Co. and B. G. Skulason, to persuade her to do so. After confirmation of sale, Drake Lumber and Fuel Co. petitioned the court for a writ of assistance to secure possession of the property. The writ was duly issued by the clerk at direction of the Honorable James P. Stapleton, circuit judge for Multnomah county, and, on the same day, placed in the hands of the defendant sheriff for service and execution.

Notwithstanding the writ commanded the sheriff “immediately after receiving it” to eject the judgment debtor from the premises and to place the Drake Lumber and Fuel Co., “or its assigns”, in possession, the sheriff, through his chief deputy, wrote, on the day the writ was received by him, the following letter to the judgment debtor:

“Dear Madam:
“You will please note the attached Writ of Assistance and the conditions contained therein.
“The Sheriff is commanded according to this writ to place the plaintiff in possession immediately. *621 However, as a matter of convenience to this office we are advancing the date to February 8th, on which day we will expect you to have vacated the premises. In other words we will expect to deliver to the plaintiff possession of the premises on Thursday morning February 9th, 1939.
‘ ‘ There is no alternative in this court order. ’ ’

The writ was not served and executed until the morning of February 16th, 1939. On the evening prior thereto, the judgment debtor took an axe and chopped up the hardwood floors and window casings and otherwise damaged the property in the agreed sum of $1,034.94. The following day she was committed to the hospital for the insane. When the sheriff finally secured possession, the keys were turned over to Mr. Skulason and a bill was rendered to him by the sheriff covering costs in the execution of the writ. Mr. Skulason thereafter exercised dominion and control over the property.

On June 15, 1939, the Honorable John P. Winter, circuit judge for Multnomah county, before whom the suit of Drake Lumber and Fuel Co. v. Kelso et al. was tried, made a nunc pro tunc order reciting that application was made by the judgment debtor on February 8, 1939, for stay of execution of the writ and that such stay was granted to and including February 15, 1939. Subsequently the nunc pro tunc order was set aside and vacated for the reason that it was made after expiration of term time.

Relative to the delay in the execution of the writ, the trial court entered the following findings of fact:

“That the attorney for the purchaser at execution sale acquiesced in the failure of the sheriff to execute said writ until the 8th day of February, 1939, and that on said 8th day of February, 1939, *622 the Hon. John P. Winter, judge of the above entitled court, being the same judge before whom the case of Drake Lumber and Fuel Company v. Eva V. Kelso, et al., was tried, by oral order directed the sheriff of said county, the defendant herein, to withhold execution of said writ until after the 15th day of February, 1939.”

Was there any legal justification for the delay in the execution of the writ? In the consideration of this question we shall direct attention first to the period of time wherein the attorney for the purchaser at the execution sale is alleged to have “acquiesced” in the stay of execution until February 8, 1939; secondly, as to the stay of execution from February 8 to February 16, 1939.

Eliminating any question of justification for delay in execution of the writ arising from the directions of the party procuring the same, or its attorney, or by reason of any order of the court in reference to it, it is clear that the sheriff, as a ministerial officer, was obliged to act with reasonable celerity: 24 R. C. L. 925; 57 C. J. 1024; Anderson on Sheriffs, § 463. As stated in Habersham v. Sears, 11 Or. 431, 5 P. 208, 50 Am. Rep. 481:

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Bluebook (online)
130 P.2d 17, 169 Or. 617, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skulason-v-pratt-or-1942.