State ex rel. Jones, Woodward & Co. v. Borden

15 Ark. 611
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 Ark. 611 (State ex rel. Jones, Woodward & Co. v. Borden) 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
State ex rel. Jones, Woodward & Co. v. Borden, 15 Ark. 611 (Ark. 1855).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walxee.

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

This was an action of debt, against William 33. Borden and bis securities, on bis offical bond as sheriff.

Tbe first breach states that, on tbe 26th of June, 1843, Jones and Woodward obtained judgment in tbe Pulaski Circuit Court against James C. Anthony for $600 debt, $66 66 damages and costs: that, on tbe 11th September, 1843, fi. fa. issued, returnable November 28th, 1843, and was levied on certain lands and returned without sale, and unsatisfied: that, on tbe 1st October, 1844, a vend. ex. issued and came to tbe bands of Borden, then sheriff, ordering sale of tbe land levied on, and for want of sufficiency of such property further to levy, and that under that writ be made tbe full amount of tbe debt, damages and costs, and bad failed to pay over tbe money.

Tbe 2d breach, after a like recital, avers that, at tbe return day, Borden, as sheriff, c&rtified and retwrned that be bad, by virtue thereof, sold property to tbe amount of $1026, and avers that be bad not paid over tbe money.

Tbe 3d breach states tbe same judgment, fi. fa. levy, and vend, ex., and then sets out tbe return of Borden; which was, that be made further levy on two negroes, and advertised tbe land and tbe negroes for sale, and offered them for sale on tbe 21st April, 1845; that Boswell Beebe purchased lots 1, 8, 9, 10 11, and 12, in Block No. 2, for $1026, which bid be refused to pay; that tbe matter being'before tbe court, be so returned for its decision, that be employed all tbe time, between 9 A. M. and 3 P. M., and could not sell tbe land as mentioned and described within tbe hour of 3 P. M. having arrived before be reached them on bis sale book, and that P. W. Trapnall bought tbe negroes for $40, which was applied on certain specified older executions: that there was no other property, and so tbe writ returned unsatisfied, and so tbe plaintiff proceeded to aver that, by this return, the judgment was satisfied, Jones and Woodward deprived of tbe right to further execution, and tbe debt, &c., lost to them.

"Tbe 4th breach is the same, only averring hindrance and ■delay by reason of such return.

Issues were taken upon the 1st and 2d breaches, which we •will consider after we have settled the law-arising upon the demurrer to the 3d and 4th breaches, which was sustained.

The special causes of demurrer'were; 1st. That neither breach shows any cause of action; 2d. That ea'ch shows that Borden had no power to execute the writ; 3d. That neither of the breaches •contains any allegation that the return is untrue; and, if true, ■then there is no cause of action.

The fust and third grounds raise the-same question, and indeed the main -question in the whole case: and the determination of the sufficiency of the 3d breach will be conclusive of that arising upon .the fourth.

The truth of the facts returned by the sheriff is not’Jcontro-vertecl, and the question is, does the return excuse the sheriff for not having the money bid for the property before the court?

The plaintiffs rely upon the following provisions of the statute, as fixing the liability of the sheriff. By the statute, Dig., Ch. 67, page 506, it is enacted: “If any officer to whom any execution shall! be delivered, shall neglect or refuse to execute or levy the same according to law, or shall take in execution any property, or if any property shall be delivered to him by any .person against whom an execution may have been issued, and such officer shall neglect or refuse to make sale of the property so-delivered, according to law, &c.; in .any such event, such officer shall be liable .and bound to pay the whole -amount of money in such execution specified, or thereon -endorsed and directed to be levied.”

See. -69 provides, that “If such officer shall not, on the return ■of any execution, or at the time the same ought to be returned, have the money which he may have become liable to pay as aforesaid, and pay the same -over according to the command of the writ, any person aggrieved thereby, may have his action against the officer, and his securities upon his bond, &c.”

Seo. YO provides, “If any officer sell any property under any execution, whether he receive payment therefor or not, or shall receive the money in any execution specified or thereon endorsed and directed to be levied, or any part thereof, and shall not have the amount of such sale, or the money so- made before the court, and pay over the same according to law, he shall be liable to pay the whole amount, &c.”

The questions presented are, was there a sale of the property by Borden- to Beebe; if so, then no matter whether he received the money bid or not, he was clearly liable- to pay it over under the provisions of the YOth section: or if after the levy he refused or neglected to sell the property levied upon, then he would be liable under the 6Yth section.

First, then, was the property sold? That it was offered and struck off to Beebe is admitted; but as he refused to pay his bid, was it a sale of the property? If so, then, the purchaser would acquire property which he- had never paid for, the sheriff would become- the guarantor for the payment of the money, and would be left to his recourse against the purchaser to make it out of him, if he could ? Such never w'as intended by law to be his liability, nor is such the effect of a bid unpaid, as is manifest from the 53d section, which declars that, “if any person shall refuse to pay the amount bid for any property struck off to Mm, the officer making the sale, may again sell such property to the highest bidder, and, if any loss shall he occasioned thereby, the officer may recover such loss by action against the first bidder, &c.” Under this section, the first bidder, by failing to pay the sum hid, forfeits it, and acquires no interest whatever in the property, as held by this court, in the- cases of Newton vs. State Bank, 14 Ark. 15, and The State vs. Lawson, sheriff, 14 Ark. 118.

There was, then, no sale of property in this case, and the next question is, did the sheriff neglect or refuse to sell the property levied upon?

This is a matter of fact, to be determined by the return itself,, under the issue formed; because, if untrue, the sheriff’s liability-would have arisen upon a count for a false, return, in which, case, the truth of the facts stated in the return would have been put in issue; but, in the case before us, the only question is, taking the return as true, is the sheriff guilty of neglect for not selling the property? He states that he had not time to sell on the day appointed by law for making sales, because, after once offering it for sale, other sales, required by law to be made on that day, consumed the whole time within which sales may lawfully be made; and this return we have held to be sufficient to execuse the sheriff from neglect in not re-selling the property, after the first bidder had failed to pay his bid. Newton vs. State Bank, 14 Ark. 15.

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15 Ark. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jones-woodward-co-v-borden-ark-1855.