Wilcox & Gibbs Guano Co. v. Piedmont Lumber Co.

97 Ala. 552
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 1, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 97 Ala. 552 (Wilcox & Gibbs Guano Co. v. Piedmont Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcox & Gibbs Guano Co. v. Piedmont Lumber Co., 97 Ala. 552 (Ala. 1892).

Opinion

HABALSON, J.

— An execution, issued on a judgment recovered by appellants against A. O. Harwell for the sum of $812.85, and costs of suit, having been levied on a quantity of mixed lumber, an office-building and other property, appellee interposed a claim, and gave bond with sureties, conditioned as provided by section 3004 of the Code : whereupon the property was delivered to the claimant. On a trial of the right of property, a verdict was returned, and judgment rendered against the claimant. The value of the property levied on was assessed by the jury as follows: “65,997 feet of rough lumber, at $8.00 per thous- and, $527.97, and 22,500 shingles, at $2.00 per thousand, $45.00, and 3,600 lathes, at $1.75, $63.00, and thirteen window sash, at $1.40, $18.00, 3 doors, at $1.25, $3.75; one office, at $40.00, and .one lumber shed, at $10.00, making the total value of the property $859.34. Before the expiration of thirty days after the rendition of the judgment, the claimant delivered to the sheriff twenty-eight thousand, three hundred and seventy-nine feet of rough lumber, seven thousand, one hundred and eighty-one. feet of dressed lumber, and the office building. The balance of the property not having been delivered, the sheriff endorsed the bond, forfeited, and thereupon, the clerk issued an execution against the claimant and the sureties on the bond for $859.94 the total assessed value of the property. The property delivered was sold by the sheriff and purchased by the claimant, for $50.00, which amount was credited on the execution. The claimant seeks by this proceeding, to supersede and quash the execution, claiming that it should be credited with $356.79,^as the assessed value of the lumber delivered.

Section 3008 of the Code provides: “If judgment is rendered against the claimant, and he fails to deliver the property to the sheriff within thirty days thereafter, to satisfy the plaintiff’s execution, the sheriff must endorse the bond forfeited; and thereupon the clerk must issue execution against all the obligors thereon, for the amount of the plaintiff’s judgment, if that be less than the value of the- property as assessed by the jury, or for the amount of such assessed value, if less than the amount of the judgment, and also for the damage, if any were assessed, and the costs of the trial of the right of property.” The condition of the-bond is to have -the property — all the property levied on and claimed — forthcoming for the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s judgment -if [554]*554found liable tlierefor: the delivery of only apart is not performance of the condition of the bond. The claimant having failed to deliver all the property within the prescribed time, it became the duty of the sheriff to endorse the bond forfeited. When so endorsed and returned, the statute makes it the duty of the clerk to issue execution against all the bondsmen for the amount of the original recovery against the defendant in execution, or for the assessed value of the property, as the case may be. The statutory judgment, fixed. by such endorsement and return of the bond, can be prevented only by full compliance with its condition. In Munter v. Leinkauff, 78 Ala. 546, it is said: “that when the liability becomes fixed by statutory judgment, it then becomes a question of payment vel non, as in case of any other debt reduced to judgment.” The question then is, to what extent does the delivery of a part of the property levied on operate as payment in exoneration of the bondsmen?

In Dunlap v. Clement, 18 Ala, 778, the bond was given for the forthcoming of a stock of goods levied on by attaeh- ' ment. The plaintiff in the attachment caused the major part of the goods to be seized under a subsequent attachment against one of the sureties on the forth coming bond. The goods not seized, were delivered to the sheriff. While it was held, that the'act of the plaintiff, having prevented compliance with the condition of the bond, was a discharge of the obligors, to the extent of the property seized under the second attachment, it was conceded, that the failure to deliver a part of the property, when not caused by the plaintiff, would amount to a forfeiture, and the bond would have the effect of a judgment, upon which execution could be issued for the amount recovered in the first attachment suit, and the bondsmen “would have been liable, for all which the goods delivered were not sufficient to satisfy.” It is said, “It is true, as contended at the bar, that if the bond is returned forfeited for the non-delivery of only a small part of the property replevied, and there should be a large amount of the judgment remaining, after applying what was delivered, the obligors would be bound for it all,, at law.” The principle is analogous. The case of Munter v. Leinkauff, supra, is similar to the present, except that the levy in tliat case was upon a stock of merchandise. After stating the principle herein above stated, it is said, “Applying these principles, we hold that, when there was a failure to return all the goods levied on, the condition of the bond was broken, and the sheriff rightly returned it forfeited. When so returned, it became a statutory judgment against all the bonds[555]*555men for the amount of the original recovery against Munter and Brothei-, including interest thereon, hut not to exceed eight hundred dollars, the assessed value of the merchandise.” Also observing, that when the liability of the parties becomes fixed by a statutory judgment, it becomes a question of payment vel non, the conclusion is thus expressed: “Partial delivery, not being a compliance with the requirements of the bond, any thing realized from the goods delivered, whether of the .stock previously levied on or not, is only payment pro tanto. It does not heal the forfeiture, nor vacate the statutory judgment.”

But counsel insist, that the decision in the case, — the levy being on a stock of goods which could not be separately assessed, from the nature of the article, — is not decisive of the present case, in which the property was separately valued. The chattels levied on were separately described and valued, but, excepting the office, the partial delivery was of a specific number feet of each, the rough and dressed lumber, which consisted of many pieces no more susceptible of separate description and valuation than the articles composing a stock of merchandise. The valuation of each was one and entire, though ascertained by a calculation based on a valuation per one thousand feet. As to the lumber delivered, the case comes directly within the rule declared in Munter v. Lienkauff, suprra. True, some stress was placed on the fact, that the valuation of the goods was one and entire; and the court declined to decide, whether, if the subject of the levy had been distinct chattels, susceptible of separate description and valuation, and their values separately assessed by the jury, the forfeiture, if there were a partial delivery, should not also be partial, and the money recovery only for the separately valued chattels which were not delivered. This question, especially as to the delivery of the office, now comes directly for decision. The fundamental principle, on which the rule rests, is that when the bond is rightly endorsed and returned forfeited, it is the right of the plaintiff, under the statute, to have execution for the amount of his judgment, or of the assessed value of all of the property, if such value be less than the judgment. The rule works no hardship.

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Related

Munter v. Leinkauff
78 Ala. 546 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1885)
Lee v. Moore
12 Mo. 458 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1849)

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Bluebook (online)
97 Ala. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-gibbs-guano-co-v-piedmont-lumber-co-ala-1892.