This is an action of ejectment, founded in part upon a constable’s sale and deed. The judgment in the Court below passed for the plaintiff, and the defendant has brought the case here.
At the trial, a judgment rendered on the 27th of August, 1867, in the Court of A. F. Blood, a Justice of the Peace of Plumas County, in favor of Hugh Mullen and against A. and E. Light (the latter .being the defendant .in this action), doing business as Light & Brothers, for. $293 10, and costs, taxed at $31 50, was offered in evidence by the plaintiff, and admitted without objection.
The plaintiff next offered an execution which had been issued upon said judgment, with a return thereon, which showed a sale of the premises in. question to one Clark; but-was otherwise entirely silent as to whether a levy had been made prior to the sale. The defendant objected to the admission of the return, because it failed to show that any *653levy had been made, or that the sale had been made by virtue of a levy under the execution, which objection was overruled, the defendant excepting.
The plaintiff next offered a constable’s deed to Clark, of the premises in question, which recited the judgment and execution aforesaid, and a levy and sale thereunder, to Clark. To the admission of the deed, the defendant objected, upon the ground that the execution recited in the deed differed materially from that which had been given in evidence, and upon the further ground, that, without a levy, no title could have passed, and no levy had been shown as yet. These objections were also overruled, the defendant excepting. The plaintiff proved, lastly, that whatever title Clark took by the constable’s deed, had come to him by mesne conveyances, and rested.
The defendant, in response to the plaintiff’s case, put the constable upon the stand, and proposed to prove by him that the recital of a levy in the deed was false, and that no levy was, in fact, made. To this the plaintiff objected, upon the ground that the defendant having been defendant in the judgment and execution under which the sale had been made, was estopped by the constable’s deed from denying the regularity of the constable’s proceedings, or the truth of his recitals, which objection was sustained, the defendant excepting.
The fact that the officer had failed to expressly state a levy in his return, was no reason why the return should be excluded. It stated a sale, and although not indispensable, was admissible to prove the sale of the premises to Clark, if the plaintiff thought proper to introduce it for that purpose.
It is settled in this State, that a purchaser at a sheriff’s sale does not depend, in any respect, for his title, upon the return of the Sheriff. In deraigning his title, he may use the return, if there is one which is satisfactory to him, for it is legal evidence for him of the official acts which it recites, but in no case is he required to introduce it, and in no case can he be prejudiced by it, whatever be its terms. He is only required to show a sale, and the authority of the officer to make it; the judgment and execution prove the
*654latter, and the deed the former. He is bound to see that there is a judgment which is not void, and an execution which is regular upon its face; but as to all the acts of the officer under the execution which precede the sale, he may rely upon the legal presumption that they have been duly performed; that the officer has found no personal property; that he has seized upon the land which he is about to sell, and that he has advertised the sale as required by law. (Cloud v. El Dorado County, 12 Cal. 133 ; Clark v. Lockwood, 21 Id. 224; Moore v. Martin, present term.) The statute is directory, so far as it deals with the. manner in which the officer is reqired to execute the writ (Smith v. Randall, 6 Cal. 50, Webber v. Cox, 6 Monroe, 110, Hayden v. Dunlap, 3 Bibb, 216), and hence, although his failure to comply with its provisions may be sufficient cause to set the sale aside, upon the application of the parties to the writ, yet, it does not render the sale void. (San Francisco v. Pixley, 21 Cal. 59.) It is the policy of the law to. uphold judicial sales when collaterally attacked, by securing purchasers, as far as possible, without prejudice to others, against risk. Such a course is to the interest of both creditors and debtors, who would be alike prejudiced by a rule which would tend to the insecurity of titles obtained in that way. It is no obstacle to this policy to require the purchaser to take the risk of the officer’s authority to sell, for that can be readily determined by an inspection of the judgment and execution under which he is acting, but to require him to ascertain and determine whether the officer has left a copy of the writ with the occupant of the land; or, if there was no occupant, that he has posted a "copy upon the premises, and filed another copy, with a description of the land, with the County Recorder, in cases where the land stands on the records of the county in the'name of the defendant in the execution; or, when it "stands upon the records in the name of some other person, that he has left with such person, or his agent, a copy of the writ and a notice, that the land (describing it), and any interest which the defendant has therein, has been seized under the writ, and that he has filed a copy of the writ and notice with the Recorder of the county, and left *655another copy with the occupant of the land; or, if there was no occupant, that he has posted a copy in a conspicuous place on the land; that the judgment debtor has no personal . property; that the land is being sold in appropriate parcels, or that it is being sold according to the directions of the judgment debtor, and that it has been advertised according to law, would amount almost to an inhibition upon judicial sales, and tend greatly to the sacrifice of the land, to the prejudice of all the parties concerned. Guided by these considerations, the Legislature has nowhere provided that the validity of a purchaser’s title shall depend upon the manner in which the officer has performed his duty; but, on the contrary, without any limitation or qualification to that effect, has provided that “upon a sale of real property, the purchaser shall be substituted to, and acquire all the right, title, interest and claim of the judgment debtor thereto.” (Sec. 299.) Whether the officer has performed his duty, lies between him and the parties to the writ, and the purchaser cannot be prejudiced by his remissness or neglect.
The cases cited to the contrary from Tennessee (Trott v. McGavock, 1 Yerg., 469, Rogers v. Jennings, 3 Id. 308, Loyd v. Anglin, 7 Id. 428, Mitchell v. Lipe, 8 Id. 181), are founded upon a statute which provides in terms “that every sale of land under execution, made contrary to the provisions of this Act, shall be null and void to all intents and purposes. ” It was under this clause that it has been held in that State that the purchaser must not only show a compliance on the part of the officer with all the directions of the statute, but that a return of the officer to that effect may be contradicted by parol testimony. There being no such or similar provision in the statute of this State, the cases referred to are not in point.
The same is true of the cases cited from New England (19 Vt. 77, 451; 21 Id. 315; 14 Mass. 20; 49 Me. 358.) They are cases of title derived under a statute extent or title of record. In such cases the doings of the officer, in making the extent, must b.e returned, for they are to be entered of record, and when recorded they make a title to the creditor as against the debtor, his heirs and assigns. Under such *656statutes the land of the debtor is not sold, but is appraised by three disinterested freeholders and set apart, by metes and bounds, to the creditor. No deed is to be given, but the return of the officer, showing his proceedings in full, is to be recorded and stand in the place of a deed. It may well be held, under such statutes, that the return of the officer must show a full compliance with all the provisions of the statute in relation to the manner of executing the writ, and that it cannot be added to or contradicted by parol; but it is obvious that cases arising under statutory provisions so radically different can give no aid in the construction of the statute of this State.
The statute of this State, however, contains a clause upon which much reliance is placed by counsel in support of the proposition that the purchaser must prove a statutory levy, or that a statutory levy is indispensable to the validity of his title. This clause is found at the close of the 217th Section, and reads thus: “Until a levy, property shall not be affected by the execution.”
It is argued that tais clause is equivalent to a formal declaration on the part of the Legislature, like that just referred to in the statute of Tennessee, that no title shall pass unless there has been a levy by such acts as the statute prescribes.
The purpose intended to be subserved by this clause of the statute is not the purpose suggested by counsel. By its use a mischievous rule of the common law was annulled, and nothing more.
By the common law all judgments had relation to the first day of the term at which they were rendered, and an execution could be issued and tested as of. that day; and also by the common law the goods of the defendant were bound by the execution from its date. Under this rule the title of the Sheriff was better than that of a bona fide purchaser ydto may have purchased the goods of the defendant in the execution even before any judgment was in fact entered against him, or an execution awarded. (Anonymous, 1 Croke, 174; Boucher v. Wiseman, Id. 440.) To avoid the mischiefs which resulted from such a rule, it was enacted in *657the statute against frauds and perjuries of 29 Car. II. Ch. III. Sec. 16 (English Statutes at Large, 12 Cha. to 7 and 8 Will. 3, page 430:) “ That no writ of fieri facias or other writ of execution shall bind the property of the goods, against whom such writ of execution is sent forth, but from the time that such writ shall be delivered to the Sheriff, Under Sheriff, or Coroners, to be executed.” By this statute the evils of the former rule were much lessened, but not entirely obviated, for the defendant in the execution might sell to a bona fide purchaser after the delivery of the writ to the officer, and before he had undertaken its execution in such a manner as to give notice of his title. The statute of this State, in providing that until a levy, property shall not be effected by the execution, has gone further than the English statute, and has entirely obviated the evils of the common law rule.
Such being, as we consider, the sole purpose of the clause in question, it follows that the seizure or the taking of the property into the custody of the officer, in the manner described in the statute, has no further effect than to fix the date or commencement of the Sheriff’s title as against all persons who are not parties to the writ. If, in the case of personal property, the officer has made no seizure until the day of the sale, the sale is nevertheless valid as against the defendant in the execution, but the title transferred by the sale cannot antedate the day of the sale as against bona fide purchasers, or other creditors who may have acquired a lien upon the goods. (Allentown Bank v. Beck, 49 Penn. State R. 409.) So in the case of land. If the judgment under which the sale is made is a lien, the title dates from the docketing of the judgment as "against third persons, and not from the date of any real or pretended statutory levy. If, as in the present case, the judgment is not a lien, the title as against third persons dates from the statutory levy, if there was one, and if not, from the filing of the certificate of sale describing the land with the Becorder of the county.
Upon this branch of the case our conclusion is that the validity of the purchaser’s title is unaffected "by the failure *658of the officer to make a seizure of the land in the mode or by the steps described in the statute; that his power to sell comes from the judgment and execution, and is not to be measured by his proceedings under the writ; that if he sells the land by a description sufficiently certain^ the title of the debtor as against the parties to the writ will pass unless redeemed within the time prescribed by the statute; that any act on the part of the officer showing an intent to sell the specific land and subject it to the satisfaction of the judgment, followed by a sale, constitutes a levying of the execution as against the defendant (see Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, word “levy”); that the performance of the acts described in the statute as a levying of the execution is material only in reference to the intervening rights of third persons, or persons who are not parties to the writ; that it is, undoubtedly, the duty of the officer to proceed strictly according to the statute, and if he does not do so, the sale may be set aside, upon motion, or he may be made to respond in damages to any one who has been injured by his neglect; but it would be gross injustice to hold that by proof of such neglect, made, perhaps, years after the sale, the purchaser’s title shall be defeated.
W ere we to hold that a seizure, such as is described in the statute, is indispensable to pass the title, we should still have to sustain the judgment of the Court below. The deed recites a levy, which recital is not only evidence of a levy (a judgment and execution having first been shown), but it is conclusive evidence, as against this defendant, who was a party to the execution. (Donahue v. McNulty, 24 Cal. 417; Hihn v. Peck, 30 Cal. 287.) Moreover, if the deed contained no such recital, the defendant would be estopped nevertheless from questioning in any respect the plaintiff’s title. The constable’s deed is the defendant’s deed. The grant is as much his as if he had signed the deed, and, therefore, he can make no defense against the deed. (Dodge v. Walley, 22 Cal. 224; McDonald v. Badger, 23 Cal. 399.) Said Justice Washington, in Lessee of Cooper v. Galbraith (3 Wash. C. C. R. 550), “The Sheriff is empowered by law to convey by deed to the purchaser, under an execution, all the right, *659title, interest and estate of tlie defendant, as fully as the defendant himself, or an attorney empowered for that purpose by him, could have done. The officer, in fact, acts as such attorney, appointed for that purpose by law. The purchase money is paid to the defendant in the execution, or is applied to his use in discharge of his debt, between whom and the purchaser the law raises a contract in like manner as if the conveyance had been made by him. The cases cited by the plaintiff’s counsel are full to the point, that the purchaser under an execution, in an ejectment against the defendant in the execution, or one claiming under him, need not show any other title than a judgment, execution and Sheriff's deed; and that the defendant will not be permitted to controvert such title by showing it to be defective, or by setting up a better outstanding title in a third person.” To the same effect is the language of Ch. J. Hornblower, in Den v. Winans (2 Green, N. J. 6.) Such being the case, it would be idle to require the purchaser to prove a levy, for that would be to require proof of a fact which cannot he disputed.
The alleged variance between the execution recited in the deed and the execution in evidence is not material in any event. While it is the usual and proper course to recite in the deed the authority of the officer, such recitals are not indispensable to the validity of the deed; and, hence, if the execution is erroneously recited, it will not affect the validity of the deed if the officer, in fact, had authority to sell. (Jackson v. Pratt, 10 John. 381.)
Judgment and order affirmed.