Opinion
07-26-1852
TYREE & als. v. DONNALLY.
Price, for the appellants. Caperton, for the appellee.
(Absent Lee, J.)
G qualified as high sheriff in 1845, with L and T as his deputies. During the year a fi. fa. against D and T went into the hands of L, who returned it, " levied, and not sold for want of bidders." After G's term of office had expired, viz: in 1847, the plaintiff sued out a writ of venditioni exponas, directed to G, late high sheriff, upon which the deputy T made a return " that he had received $500, which, after deducting sheriff's commissions, gives a credit of $472 50, 16th of June 1846, which is all that I have made:" HELD:
1st. That the levy of the fi. fa. by one deputy and the return on the venditioni exponas by another, of the receipt of the money, does not impair the right of the plaintiff in the execution to subject the high sheriff.
2d. The high sheriff cannot object to the fact that the deputy T, who received the money, was a defendant in the execution.
3d. The sheriff being authorized to sell by virtue of the levy under the fi. fa. and as a consequence to receive the money; and the venditioni exponas giving him no new authority, if prior to the issuing of the last writ, he sold the property or received the money, it was his duty to return the truth of the case upon the writ, so as to give the plaintiff the benefit of the return: And the high sheriff is therefore liable to the plaintiff, though the money was received by the deputy T before the venditioni exponas was issued.
4th. Where the plaintiff in the execution lives in the county, no demand of the money is necessary before proceeding to subject the high sheriff.
5th. In entering the judgment, damages are given from a date anterior to the date of the return of the venditioni exponas. As this writ is properly described in the notice, and damages from the return day thereof claimed, and it is made a part of the record, the error was merely clerical, and might have been corrected by the court in term, or by the judge in vacation, upon motion, by reference to the writ. It is not therefore a ground for reversing the judgment, but the same will be amended and affirmed, if there is no other error.
6th. The statute gives fifteen per cent. per annum interest against a sheriff for failing to pay over money received on an execution. The law upon the subject of appeals gives six per cent. in lien of interest. This last statute does not control or apply to the first.
This was a notice in the Circuit court of Fayette county, by Van B. Donnally against John Guinn, late sheriff of the county, and his sureties, to recover money made upon an execution by William Tyree, one of his deputies. The facts are stated in the opinion of the court. There was a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for 472 dollars 50 cents, with damages at the rate of fifteen per cent. per annum, from the 6th of November 1843, till payment, and his costs. Whereupon, the sureties applied to this court for a supersedeas, which was awarded.
Price, for the appellants.
Caperton, for the appellee.
OPINION
ALLEN, J.
This is a supersedeas to a judgment rendered upon notice, against the sureties of John Guinn, late sheriff of Fayette county, in his official bond. It appears from the bill of exceptions, that Guinn qualified as sheriff on the 13th of March 1845, and remained in office until the end of the year, when he was succeeded by another sheriff. That at the time of Guinn's qualification, William Tyree and Thomas A. Lewis qualified as his deputies, and continued as such: That during the year a fi. fa. in favor of the defendant in error against Dickenson and William Tyree came to the hands of the deputy, Thomas A. Lewis, who made a return of " levied, and not sold for want of bidders; " and that on the 5th of August 1847, there was issued a writ of venditioni exponas, made returnable on the 1st Monday of November following, and directed to Guinn, late sheriff, upon which William Tyree, the deputy, made a return in the following words: " Received of H. M. Dickenson the sum of 500 dollars on the within execution, which, after deducting sheriff's commissions, gives a credit of 472 dollars 50 cents 16th June 1846, which is all that I have made."
The duty of the sheriff who has levied an execution, to go on and complete it, and the authority of the deputy to act after the expiration of the sheriff's term of office, were considered in the case of Tyree against Wilson. In this case it is objected that the levy on the fi. fa. was made by one deputy, and another deputy returned on the venditioni exponas, the receipt of the money.
This I think does not affect the rights of the plaintiff in the execution. He has no control over the appointment of deputies, or the distribution of the business amongst them. The law knows but one sheriff of the county; and it is his business to see that process directed to him is executed by the proper officer. There is nothing to show that the plaintiff in the execution intermeddled in any way with the arrangements or proceedings of the sheriff.
It is further objected, that the deputy Tyree was a defendant in the execution. The bill of exceptions does not show any such proofs. But if the fact were so, it could not impair the plaintiff's rights, nor would it lay in the mouth of the sheriff to say he had permitted a deputy who was interested to interfere with the execution.
It is moreover alleged, that it appears by the return on the venditioni exponas, that the money was received before the date of the writ. The sheriff was authorized to sell by virtue of the levy under the fi. fa., and as a consequence to receive the money. The venditioni exponas gives him no new authority. If prior to the issuing of the venditioni exponas he sold the property or received the money, it was his duty to return the truth of the case on the venditioni exponas, so as to give the plaintiff in the execution the benefit of the return.
It is assigned as error, that there is no evidence of a demand. The objection does not seem to have been made in the court below, nor does it appear that the plaintiff in the execution resided without the county. If he resided within the county, it was the duty of the sheriff to seek him out and pay the money, or have it in court on the return day of the writ.
In entering the judgment, damages are given for 15 per centum per annum from the 16th of November 1843 until paid, a period long anterior to the payment of the money, and before any execution issued. This is clearly a clerical mistake. The writ of venditioni exponas is correctly described in the notice, and damages from the return day thereof claimed. The original debt bore interest from the year 1843, and that date was inadvertently inserted in the order. The plaintiff in the execution proceeds upon the return, and is by law entitled to the damages from the return of the execution only. But the mistake in the date is one which we think could have been amended by the court below in term, or by the judge in vacation, upon motion. The execution is set out in the notice and made part of the record by the bill of exceptions. There is, therefore, a paper whereby the judgment may be safely amended, according to the Code 681, § 5. And as the amendment has not been made, though it ought to be, this court, by the 6th section, may now make it and affirm the judgment, if there be no other error.
The statute gives fifteen per cent. per annum interest against a sheriff for failing to pay over money. The law upon the subject of appeals gives six per cent. in lieu of interest. The court will consider this last statute as not controlling or applying to the first.
Judgment amended and affirmed.