Stevens v. Morse

Mellen C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court in Cumberland, at the adjournment of May term in August following.

Both parties claim under Joshua Stevens. The deed to the de-mandant was dated and executed eight days subsequent to the attachment in the suit of the bank against Stevens, but about six months prior to the levy of their execution. Therefore, if the levy was an ineffectual one, the title of the demandant is good. The officer to whom the execution was delivered for service, had no authority or direction from the bank, except to collect tire contents. Cyrus Carleton, a brother of Henry Carleton, one of the execution debtors, paid him the contents, which the bank received within forty-eight hours : and the officer, at the time of receiving the amount, gave a receipt to him for the same and for his fees ; and delivered to him the execution, without any indorsement thereon. In view of all the circumstances of this case, as detailed in the report, the question is, What was the legal effect of this payment and delivery over of the execution to Cyrus Carleton? It is admitted that the delivery of an execution to a third person for a full and valuable consideration paid, is a legal assignment of the contents of *39such execution. Vose v. Handy, 2 Greenl. 322, and cases there cited. But no one can make such assignment, but the creditor or some person by him duly authorized ; and it appears by the testimony of the officer himself that he had no such authority, nor did the bank ever make any assignment or release of their supposed right to Cyrus Carleton until January 25, 1819 ; and then in consideration of one dollar only. If this is contended to be a ratification of the act of the officer in undertaking to assign the execution to Cyrus Carleton, without any authority at the time, the obvious reply is that it can never be construed to have this effect, when the rights of third persons are interposed, and which would thus be defeated. Now, before the levy of the execution, and before the unauthorized assignment of the execution by the officer to Cyrus Carleton, the deed to the demandant had vested the title in him. The release of the bank, therefore, was too late to affect the title thus vested. But it is further contended on the part of the tenant, that the bank sanctioned the proceedings of the officer respecting the execution, by the vote of the directors, passed on the 14th of January — the day before the levy — appointing an appraiser, and authorizing Cyrus Carleton, as their agent to receive seisin. This was several days after the bank had received full payment of their execution, and at a time when they had no interest in it, nor claimed to have any ; and this appears evident from the fact above stated, namely, their afterwards releasing all title to Cyrus Carleton for the consideration of one dollar.

But there is another ground on which we more especially place our decision. The cases of Reed v. Pruyn, 7 Johns. 426, and Sherman v. Boyce, 15 Johns. 443, cited by the counsel for the plaintiff, have a strong bearing on the present case, as giving the legal character of the acts of an officer in receiving payment of an .execution, and at the same time endeavoring to continue the judgment and execution in force as against the debtor.

The marginal abstract of the former case is, that “ a sheriff cannot with his own money pay tire plaintiff on an execution, and afterwards levy the execution out of the property of the defendant; nor can he take a bond or other security, and detain the execution in his hands, and use it afterwards to enforce the payment of the money advanced *40by him.” In the latter case the officer joined with the defendant in a note to raise money to pay the execution, with an express agreement , that the execution should remain in force. The officer.being called on for the money, which he paid, sold the defendant’s property on the execution. It was held that the execution was satisfied aná func-tus officio, by means of such previous payment. The case of Hammett v. Wyman, and Bracket v. Winslow, are also strong to the point that a payment by one of the execution debtors js a complete satisfaction of an execution to all intents and purposes; and from that moment it'ceases to exist as a legal precept. By examining the facts in this case, it appears that the execution was paid and satisfied out of the property of Henry Carleton, one of the execution debtors. He and his brother Cyrus had been partners, and though they had dissolved, their property had not been divided, and the goods which had been attached, were left in the hands of Cyrus, either as partner or as his agent. In either case they were under his control; and though Cyrus raised the money to pay to the officer the amount of the execution, yet Henry, as soon as he returned, approved of the course he had pursued, and reimbursed to him all he advanced, so that Cyrus lost nothing. On these plain facts it appears that Cyrus has at most paid one dollar, and perhaps not that, for the land which he conveyed to the tenant, who now insists that he has a better title than the demandant. It further appears that the personal property of Henry, which was attached, was sufficient to satisfy the judgment; and the professed object in view in making the above-arrangement between the officer and Cyrus Carleton, was effectually to release that property, and procure satisfaction of the debt in toto out of the ■ estate of Joshua Stevens, another judgment debtor. The particular reasons for this course of proceeding are not disclosed ; sind as it has not succeeded, it seems not material for us to ascertain. • We do not perceive that the arrangements between Stevens- and two of the co-sureties, as to a contribution and the partial indemnity of Stevens, can have any effect upon the demandant’s title; for as the levy of the execution was rendered wholly ineffectual and inoperative by means of the payment of its amount in full to the officer, no after transactions,would give it validity or any legal effect.

*41The case of Allen v. Holden, relied on by the counsel for the tenant, does not oppose those cited by the demandant’s counsel. That suit was avowedly prosecuted by Wyman for his own benefit, in the name of Allen, who had assigned the judgment to him in consideration of his having settled an action which Allen had before commenced against the sheriff, for Wyman’s neglect in not collecting the contents of an execution of Allen’s against Holden. The court in their opinion say “ The suit against the sheriff was not for the debt, but for damages for his non-performance of his duty. Nominal damages only might have been recovered; and had the suit proceeded to judgment and execution, it would have been no legal discharge of the original debtor from the judgment recovered against him.” The case of Norton v. Soule presented a question different from the present. That was an assignment of a mortgage deed by the mortgagee; not of an execution by a sheriff, after receiving payment of one of the debtors.

There must be judgment for the demandant on the default already entered; and the question of increased value of the premises must be subject to the written agreement of the parties on file.