W. T. Rawleigh Co. v. Brantley

19 So. 2d 808, 197 Miss. 244, 157 A.L.R. 188, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 292
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1944
DocketNo. 35677.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 So. 2d 808 (W. T. Rawleigh Co. v. Brantley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. T. Rawleigh Co. v. Brantley, 19 So. 2d 808, 197 Miss. 244, 157 A.L.R. 188, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 292 (Mich. 1944).

Opinions

McGeh.ee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding whereby the appellant, The W. T. Eawleigh Company, seeks to recover by motion against the appellees, Will D. Brantley, as sheriff of Neshoba County; and the surety on his official bond, the penal sum. of Five Hundred Dollars provided for under Section 4245, Code of 1942. The complaint is that the said officer made a false return on certain writs of execution issued on an enrolled judgment in the sum of $1,-232.47, including interest and costs, held by appellant against J. J. Barrett, F. S. Pugh and J. H. Beall, and which writs were placed in the hands of such officer on February 25 and July 30, 1943, respectively, and made returnable to the next term of the circuit court of said county to be held in September of that year.

The above mentioned statute reads as follows:

“If a sheriff or his deputy, coroner, or other officer, make a false return on any process whatever, he shall, for every such offense, be liable to pay the sum of five hundred dollars to the plaintiff in the process, recoverable against the officer and his sureties, or the officer alone, by motion before the court to which the process is returnable, after five days’ notice of such motion to *248 the officer and his sureties. If the returns alleged to be false do not appear on the face of the record to be so, the court shall, at the request of either party, impanel a. jury to ascertain whether the return be false or not, on an issue joined under the direction of the court; and if the jury find that the return is false, judgment shall be entered for the said sum against the officer and his sureties, with costs.”

Each of the executions commanded the sheriff that ‘‘of the real and personal estate of P. S. Pugh, J. H. Beall and J. J. Barrett, you cause to be made” the amount of the said judgment, interest and cost.

On August 12, 1943, the sheriff wrote to the attorney of the judgment creditor the following letter:

“After close consideration of the above case I have come to the conclusion that I am in doubt as to all the property in the name of defendants belonging to them, and under the circumstances I will not make the levy unless you furnish me an indemnifying bond to protect me against damage or suit by the above parties, if I should make the levy. Mr. Pugh claims the exemption of an homestead and the other property is under mortgage to the Federal Land Bank. There has not been an appraisal of the property and I do not know what the value is.
“As to his personal property, Mr. Pugh does not claim anything above the exemption. Tour execution does not set out any special kind of property.
“Hoping* to hear from you at an early date, I beg to remain,
“Tour friend,
“ Will D. Brantley. ’ ’

On the next day the said attorney replied, in substance, that he had received the sheriff’s said letter and that he was taking the matter up with his client for further advice, and also1 stating that “your acts, or failure to act, in this matter are to me personally satisfactory, ’ ’ but that he would communicate with the sheriff *249 further after receipt of additional advice from Ms client. Thereupon the sheriff endorsed his return on the writ of execution which was issued on July 30, 1943, in the following language:

“I, Will D. Brantley, sheriff and tax collector of the above State and County, have this day served the within named execution on the within named J. J. Barrett, F. S. Pugh, and J. H. Beall personally and further serving by a diligent search and inquiry to find something upon which I could levy to satisfy said judgment, but after diligent search and inquiry I have failed to find anything in my county upon which I could levy.
‘ ‘ This the 13th day of August, 1943,
“Will D. Brantley,
Sheriff and Tax Collector. ’ ’

Thereafter, on August 19', 1943, the attorney for the judgment creditor replied further to the sheriff’s letter of August 12th and set forth his views as to the sheriff’s want of authority to demand an indemnifying bond before making a levy upon real estate, and further stated that “as for levy upon the personal property we declined to execute an indemnifying bond . . . ,” on the ground that he did not think that he could show that “Mr. Pugh owns this personal property.” And the record fails to disclose what personal property the other two judgment debtors may have had.

The motion against the sheriff on his official bond avers the return of the said officer to be a “false return,” and that the falsity thereof consists in this: “The defendants named in the execution, or some of them, own and have in their possession in Neshoba County, Mississippi, substantial amounts of real estate and personal property upon which levy could have been made at the time of the making of the aforementioned return

The sheriff testified that he knew that the judgment debtor F. S. Pugh owned approximately 225 acres of land. It is also shown by letter of the attorney of the *250 judgment creditor written on August 19th, 1943, as aforesaid, that both he and his client knew this fact, it being stated in said letter as follows:

“We advised our client that the 227 acres of land owned by Mr. Pugh is valued at $10,000' and that they would be safe in paying to Mr. Pugh his $3,000 exemption and taking the place. ’ ’

Other than this statement of the attorney in that letter there is no suggestion or statement in the record as to the value of said land. It was assessed for taxation at approximately $1,500, and it was shown that a lien was held thereon to secure a loan of $1,500 in favor of the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, but on which several annual payments had been made. This land was, of course, subject to execution to the extent that it exceeded 160 acres in quantity or $3,000 in value. But Section 323, Code of 1942, provides that if the land on which a person claiming the exemption resides shall exceed this quantity or value, and a proper selection of a homestead has not been made, the officer holding an execution against such person, “and not finding other property to satisfy the same, shall levy the execution on the whole land, . . . ”

The proof fails to disclose that there was not sufficient personal property belonging to the defendants,' or some of them, to satisfy the judgment if the indemnifying bond requested by the sheriff had been given as provided for by Section 316, Code 1942.

But conceding for the purpose of this decision that the judgment creditor had the right to forego the execution of such a bond and having a levy made upon any personal property belonging to either of the defendants, and to demand of the sheriff instead that he levy upon the land of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
19 So. 2d 808, 197 Miss. 244, 157 A.L.R. 188, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-t-rawleigh-co-v-brantley-miss-1944.