Wilson v. . Oswalt

The declaration contained two counts:

1st. For the price of the goods sold and delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff.

2nd. On a special promise to pay for the goods sold.

In support of the first count, the plaintiff proved by one Wasson, that the goods were sold as the property of Andrew Kerr, at public auction, and that the defendant bid them off, and that they were delivered to him.

In support of the second count, the plaintiff proved by Wasson, that he was a constable, and sold the goods at public auction, and that the defendant became the purchaser at the sum of $ _____, and they were delivered, but that the defendant, not having the money, promised to pay the plaintiff the amount *Page 567 of his bids on a certain day thereafter, and that on the day agreed on, he did not pay.

G. W. Kerr, a witness for the plaintiff, on his cross-examination, stated that the property had never been in the possession of the defendant.

The plaintiff introduced several judgments and executions against G. W. Kerr, Andrew Kerr and others, with the levies of the property sold, endorsed thereon by the plaintiff, as constable, as the property of Andrew Kerr, under which the sale was made.

The defendant's counsel asked his Honor to charge the jury, that there was no evidence of a levy. This was refused, and the defendant excepted.

It appeared that some of the judgments, and the executions on them, were irregular, but property enough, consisting of many articles, was sold to satisfy all of them. His Honor charged the jury that, in this case, if any one of the executions was regular and good, it was sufficient. The defendant's counsel again excepted.

Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and appeal by the defendant. It is manifest from the facts, stated in the bill of exceptions, that the plaintiff cannot sustain his count for goods sold and delivered. He was a constable, and purported to sell as such. One of his witnesses testified, that the goods were sold and delivered, and another stated that, though sold, they were never in the defendant's possession, and yet, no instruction seems to have been asked or given to the jury, as to which of these, apparently, contradictory statements, made by the plaintiff's own witnesses, was to be taken as true. The discrepancy can only be reconciled by reference to another part of the testimony of the first witness. The goods were sold for cash, and the defendant was not prepared to pay *Page 568 the sum which he bid, but agreed to do so on a subsequent day; and it is fairly to be inferred, that the plaintiff refused to permit him to take the goods away until he should have paid for them, which he never did.

The action then, must be maintained, if it can be maintained at all, upon the second count, which is for goods sold to defendant, and for a violation of his contract in not taking and paying for them. There was plenary proof of a levy, as it appeared that the plaintiff was an officer, with executions in his hands, upon which he had endorsed, levies upon goods of one of the defendants in the execution, and had the goods in his possession. What better evidence of a levy he could have given, we are at a loss to conceive.

The plaintiff, then, had clearly an authority to sell the goods, unless the judgments and executions, under which he had seized them, were absolutely void. It is assumed in the bill of exceptions, that some of them were so, but his Honor held that if a single execution were valid, it would sustain the sale of all the goods. In that we think he erred. He was no doubt misled by not adverting to the distinction between the case of an arrest, in which an officer would be justified, if he had but one good writ in his hands, even though he had acted under a void process, or where he had sold a single article under several executions, when some of them were void, and the case, like the present, where he sold several articles. In the latter case, he would have no authority to sell more of the goods than would be sufficient to satisfy the valid executions in his hands; for as soon as he had raised an amount sufficient for that purpose, his power would be at an end. The precise amount of the sales, in the case before us, is not stated in the bill of exceptions, but the objection assumes that it was more than was necessary to pay off the valid executions in the hands of the plaintiff, and his Honor's instruction is predicated upon that assumption. For their error, the judgment must be reversed, and a venire denovo awarded.

PER CURIAM, Judgment reversed. *Page 569