State ex rel. Hanna v. Hitchens

57 N.E. 935, 25 Ind. App. 244, 1900 Ind. App. LEXIS 78
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 29, 1900
DocketNo. 3,024
StatusPublished

This text of 57 N.E. 935 (State ex rel. Hanna v. Hitchens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hanna v. Hitchens, 57 N.E. 935, 25 Ind. App. 244, 1900 Ind. App. LEXIS 78 (Ind. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Comstock, J.

—This action was prosecuted against the appellees George W. Hitchens, constable, and John Mitchell and Andrew Eay, his bondsmen, to recover money collected by Hitchens as principal and retained from appellants. Nine creditors of appellants (relators) obtained judgment before a justice of the peace against them, and caused executions to issue to appellee Hitchens as constable. He levied the executions upon the store of the relators in the city of Logansport, Indiana, and sold a portion of the goods to satisfy the same. The relators claim that the total amount due on the judgments, interest, fees, costs, and accrued costs, at the time they were paid, was $821.72; that the constable charged and retained the sum of $1,033.77, being $203.14 more than he was authorized by the statute of Indiana to [245]*245charge and retain. The cause was put at issue, tried by the court, and judgment rendered for costs in favor of appellees.

The action of the court in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial is the only error assigned. There are four reasons assigned in the motion for a new trial. The first is: “The finding of the court is not sustained by,'sufficient evidence.” The second: “The finding of the court is contrary to law.” The record discloses no ruling nor exception thereto upon which to base the third and fourth reasons for a new trial. It remains only, therefore, to consider the first and second reasons for a new trial.

The following is the return made to the writ by appellee Hitchens: “I received this writ on the 1st day of June, at 1:30, 1891, and on the 23rd day of September, by virtue thereof, and also of eight other writs against the same defendants in my hands from the dockets of David Laing 'and Geo. W. Eender and J. H. Walters, justices of the peace of Cass county, Indiana, I levied all of said writs upon a certain stock of notions, pictures, frames, and toys, etc., belonging to the defendants, situated in a storeroom at 421 Market street, Logansport, Indiana, and I proceeded to have the stock appraised according to law, which was done by Erank M. Polk and J as. A. Day, and thereafter, to wit, on the 4th day of October, I advertised the said goods for sale as required by law, and when the time of the sale arrived, the said stock having come into litigation by claimants against the property, to wit, a suit by William Douglass in the Cass Circuit Court, I suspended said sale until the issue of that case was determined, and after the same had been determined I again advertised said stock for sale according to law, by posting three written and printed notices in the city of Logansport at public places therein, and one on the door of the building in which said goods were contained, and at the time appointed for the sale I proceeded to sell said stock of goods under said writs at public auction and outcry, beginning on the 6th day of November and con-[246]*246turning the same from day to day as required by law until the 2nd day of December, when, having realized the sum of $1,042.10 upon the sale under said writs, I suspended the sale, leaving a portion of the goods levied upon still unsold, and having sold sufficient of the stock to satisfy said writs against said defendants in my hands and out of the proceeds thereof I paid the judgments of $118.20 in favor of Gustave Burgman, which with interest, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $167.15; and also another judgment in favor of Gustave Burgman of $117.35,. which with interest, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $166.34; and also another judgntent in favor of Gustave Burgman of $117.91, which with interest, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $166.60; and also another judgment in favor of' Gustave Burgman of $119, which with interest, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $167.21; .and also another judgment in favor of the Rational Jewelry Company of $35.46, which with interest, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $59.54; and also another judgment in favor of James E. Patton & Company of $22.66, which with interests, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $46.08; and also another judgment in favor of Daniel P. Rhoads, $13.33, which with interests, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $37.35; and also another judgment in favor of Wilson, Humphrey & Company, of $92.29, which with interest, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $114.88; and also another judgment in favor of the Toledo Manufacturing Company for $85.88, which with interest, costs, and accruing costs amounts to $108.94,—making in all the sum of $1,033.79; and I have paid the rent and storage room for said goods so levied upon for the period of seventy days, amounting to $70, and also the appraisers; and the stock of goods being situated in an eligible room in a good locality to realize the largest possible price, and it being necessary to the economical and safe management of the sale to employ an auctioneer, and it being necessary for the purpose to employ a clerk, I have [247]*247paid the services of both as part of the costs herein, and I herewith return this writ satisfied.in full, and I further certify that the surplus of goods levied upon under this writ and the proceeds thereon are held at this time under other writs against the defendant Charles M. Hanna. Geo. W. Hitchens, Constable.”

It appears from the record that appellee Hitchens retained from the proceeds of the sale of which he made return, in addition to t^.e fees provided by statute, the amount expended by him for rent of storeroom, the amounts paid the auctioneer, clerk, and watchman, the amount paid for lock for door of the store, and the cost of lighting the room by night.

The proposition that an officer can retain for his services only such fees as are allowed by law requires the citation of no authorities. The principal question presented by this appeal is whether he is entitled to the amounts thus retained or is limited to the fees fixed by statute. The act providing for fees for constables went into force Marph 8, 1897. Acts 1897, pp. 217, 218. This fee bill is intended to provide compensation for personal services which the law imposes upon him. While the decisions are not in harmony, from the weight of authorities, we think the proposition may be deduced that a constable is entitled to be reimbursed for necessary and reasonable expenditures made by Trim in good faith in taking care of and preserving property seized under valid process.

It was said in Cramer v. Appenstein, 16 Col. 495, 27 Pac. 713, by the supreme court of Colorado, that “the ordinary fees allowed by statute evidently were not intended to cover all extraordinary disbursements which the sheriff may be compelled to make in the faithful discharge of such duties.” The constable’s return, which we have set out, shows the date of the levy, of the expenditures, the appraisement of the stock, the advertisement of the sale, the suspension of the sale because of litigation involving the title of [248]*248the property, the further advertisement after the determination of said litigation, and the sale of said property from day to day at auction, until the sum of $1,042.10 was realized therefrom; that he applied of the proceeds of said sale the sum of $1,033.19 to the payment of the several executions in his hands; that, between the time of the levy of the executions and the conclusion of the sale, he paid rent for the room in which the goods were stored—the same room in which the judgment defendants had done business —and sold, at the rate of $1 per day for seventy days.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

C. B. Rogers & Co. v. Simmons
29 N.E. 580 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1892)
Smith v. Huddleston
103 Ala. 223 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.E. 935, 25 Ind. App. 244, 1900 Ind. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hanna-v-hitchens-indctapp-1900.