State Ex Rel. Jordan v. Pool

27 N.C. 105
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 27 N.C. 105 (State Ex Rel. Jordan v. Pool) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Jordan v. Pool, 27 N.C. 105 (N.C. 1844).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

Although arising, no doubt, merely from inadvertence, there is a manifest error, for which the judgment would, at all events, be reversed. The court non-suited *108 the plaintiff after a judgment by default against one of the defendants; upon which the case was standing for an enquiry of damages from the alleged breaches. The relators had established a cause of action against that defendant, and could not be non-suited.

But we think there was also error on the merits. Even if the bond had been held to be valid, the court decided that the relators were not entitled to an action on it. ¥e think they are entitled to the money, and could maintain an action for it on the sheriff's bond, if duly executed.

Sueh an interest, as remained in Josiah Jordan after his deed to Pool, was liable to execution, as an equity of redemption, under the act of 1812. Pool v. Glover, 2 Ired. 129. Now, the sale of an equity of redemption is in its nature a sale subject to the mortgage debt. It is the interest of the mortgagor in the land, over and above the mortgage debt, that is sold; and the estate of the mortgagee is not touched. Consequently the sum bid on any part of it does not belong to the mortgagee; but it. is first to satisfy the execution, and, secondly, the surplus goes to the mortgagor, as the owner of the interest sold. Camp v. Cox, 1 Dev. and Bat. 52. If another person, instead of the sheriff, had been trustee or mortgagee, he could not, then, have demanded this surplus from Pool: so, neither can Pool, as trustee, retain it. This is the necessary result from the provision of the statute, that an equity of redemption, as such, may be sold on a legal execution, and from the adjudications that a conveyance in trust for sale to pay specified debts stands upon the same footing as a mortgage, properly speaking. Then, if Josiah Jordan had lived until the sale of the land, this money would have been his. If so, it follows, that it belongs to his heirs and that they may recover it by law. Therefore the court of law must recognize the interest therein of the mortgagor himself, as the owner, and, in like manner, recognize the rights of those who succeed in point of title to the mortgagor. This land decend-ed to the relators, subject to the lien of the levy. It was to satisfy that debt, but the surplus belonged to the heirs. And *109 as the surplus of land, if any had been unsold on the execution, after satisfying the mortgage debt, would have gone to' the relators, by parity of reason the surplus of the money, arising from a sale in the heirs’ time, goes to them also.

As we are not aware on what point his Honor’s decision against the plaintiff was founded, it is our duty to consider each of them. Having held that the relators are entitled to this money, we are to consider, next, whether they can recover it in this form of proceeding and from these defendants: that is, supposing the bond to have been duly delivered. Upon this point also our opinion is with the relators. A purchaser must undoubtedly pay his whole bid to the sheriff, after getting enough to discharge the execution; must see that the purchaser satisfies the surplus to the owner of the property, before he can make a conveyance to the purchaser. Otherwise the defendant in the execution loses his property and is without any security for a part of the price. That the law never intends. Then, how does the sheriff receive this surplus ? It is true, •that he does not make that money by the direct mandate of ,the writ, nor is he bound by the tenor of the process to return the surplus into court with the writ. For the writ only commands him to make the sum recovered by the plaintiff and bring that into court. Yet as he is obliged by the law to receive the surplus, as a duty to the defendant, it is necessarily to be regarded as a duty of office, resulting from the prior duty, imposed by the writ, of making the sale. The money in the sheriff’s hands, therefore, may not be deemed in cus-todia legis, so as not to be stopped by attachment or other means, which may prevent the sheriff from paying it into court with the writ, yet his only authority to receive it arises out of his office, and for all money received virtute officii, the sheriff’s bond is a security, whether it belong to the plaintiff or defendant in the execution. We think this within the wprds of the bond in this case. It is money “ received by virtue of processnot payable, indeed, to the relators, “by /the tenor thereof,” but payable to them “ as the proper per- J sons to whom the same is due.” Even if those words in the bond *110 did not cover this liability, the general terms “in ail things “well, truly, and faithfully execute the said office,” would be sufficient; and it is the duty of the court to interpret the obligation, so as, if possible, to secure all money which the sheriff can rightfully receive for the citizen.

As the Superior Court did not give judgment against that surety, who submitted to a judgment for $428 17, upon the proviso there could have been a recovery upon a good bond, it must have been his Honor’s opinion, that the relators had no cause of action against the sheriff for an official default; and for the reasons given, this court holds that to have been erroneous. It would not, however, be necessary to send the cause back to another trial, if the omission to give the plaintiff judgment for that sum were the only error; because this court is authorized to render such judgment as the Superior- Court ought to have rendered, and consequently, judgment might ordinarily be given here for that sum of $428 17, as agreed on. But we cannot give it in this case, because there is no method, in which this court can dispose of the judgment by default against one of the defendants, which makes it absolutely necessary to reverse the whole judgment, and send the case to the Superior Court for further proceedings. That, however, we should not feel bound, or even authorized to do, however erroneous the opinion of the court might have been on the other points of law, if the bond sued on were so radically defective, that no action could be sustained on it against any person, since it would be useless to send a case to another trial, if the record itself showed that the plaintiffs never could recover. It becomes our duty, then, to enquire, whether this bond be thus defective. In pursuing that enquiry, and applying the result of it to the case, we find that the cause is brought into a singular state in consequence of the manner in which it was concluded in the Superior Court, and the legislation of the recent assembly pending this appeal. We think the bond is made good and effectual, by the acceptance of it for the. State by the Legislature, though at the time of the institution of the writ, and the decision in the Superior Court, no jndg *111 ment could have been rendered on it. By the Revised Statute, c. 109, s. 8 and 9, a majority of the justices, or, if not, nine at least, are required to take the sheriff’s bond, and being taken by a less number, this bond was not duly delivered, and did not then legally become the instrument it purports to be. Shirly's case, 1 Ired. 597. Wall's case, 2 Ired. 267, 272.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.C. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jordan-v-pool-nc-1844.