Clark v. Sawyer

By the Court, Rhodes, J.:

The action was to recover the possession of land in the city of San Francisco. It is admitted that the title, of the premises was at one time in one J. J. Bryant, and that the plaintiff had succeeded to that title, unless it had passed to the defendants’ grantors by an earlier deraignment.

To establish their title, the defendants put in evidence two judgments in favor of Starkey, Janion & Co. against Bryant, one rendered in March and the other in April, 1850, in the Court of First Instance in .the District of San Francisco. They then proved that writs of fieri facias were issued upon these judgments and placed in the hands of the then Sheriff of the District of San Francisco, and were levied by him upon the premises, before the 15th day of April, 1850, at which time the Court of First Instance was superseded by the organization of the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District. They further proved that the record of the Starkey, Janion & Co. judgments came into the lawful possession of the Fourth District Court before the 19th day of April, 1850, and that on that day, on motion of the attorney of Starkey, Janion & Co., the Court made an order in the follow words: “Starkey, Janion & Co. v. J. J. Bryant. Now at this day the Court orders the Sheriff to proceed to sell the property levied on under executions previously issued.”

In pursuance of this order, two writs, called writs of venditioni exponas, were duly issued out of the Court upon the judgments, and placed in the hands of John C. Hayes, who was the newly elected and qualified Sheriff of the county of San Francisco, in obedience to which, he, on the 3d day of May, 1850, sold the premises to the grantors of the de*137fendants, and in due time gave them Sheriffs deeds therefor. These deeds recited the fact, that by virtue of two writs of fieri facias, issued out of the (late) Court of First Instance in and for the District of San Francisco, in favor of Starkey, Janion & Co. against J. J. Bryant, directed to the Sheriff of said District, commanding him to make certain moneys in the said writs specified; that officer had made a levy upon the premises; that he had subsequently made return to the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District that he had made such levy and seizure, and that “afterwards by two writs of venditioni exponas thereupon issued in the same causes, by special order of the said District Court to the aforesaid Sheriff of the county of San Francisco directed, the said Sheriff was ordered and commanded to expose the said pieces, parcels and lots of land above mentioned to sale,” and after the other usual recitals, as to advertisement, etc., proceeded to convey the premises to the grantees therein “as fully as T, the said John C. Hayes, the Sheriff aforesaid, can, may, or ought to, by virtue of the said writs and orders, and' of the law in such case made and provided, grant, bargain, sell,” etc.

It does not appear at what time the writs of fieri facias were returned to the Fourth District Court, nor'why they were so returned without a sale of the premises levied on,

■ but it would seem that they must have been returned before the 19th of April, when the order of that date was made.

When the defendants offered their Sheriff’s deeds in evidence, they were objected to on the ground; first. That the sales and deeds should have been made by the old Sheriff of the District of San Francisco, and not by the new Sheriff of the county; and that, as made, they were void ; second. That they did not recite the date -or "amount of the judgments, or the date of the writs of fieri facias, or the date of the writs of venditioni exponas; third. That they appeared nevei to have been sealed by the Sheriff. These objections were overruled, and judgment passed in favor of the defendants, from which, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial, this appeal is taken.

1. The question is not whether the old Sheriff might have *138retained the writs of fieri facias, and under the authority of the thirty-fourth section of the Act of 1850, to supersede certain Courts, made sales thereunder of the property levied on, nor whether having returned these writs to the proper Court, the writs of venditioni exponas might have been issued to and executed by him, but whether they must necessarily have been issued to him, and could be executed by no other officer.

The authorities make a distinction between cases where the venditioni is issued for the sale of personal property, and where-it is issued for the sale of land. In cases of the former class, the venditioni must go to the officer who made the seizure; for by the seizure he acquired a special property in the chattels, and a right to their possession, by virtue of which, it is said, he might sell them without any new command, after the return of the writ, and even after his term of office had expired. (Tarkinton v. Alexander, 2 Dev. and Batt., N. C. 87; Regers v. Darnoby, 4 B. Monroe, 238.) In England the venditioni goes only for the sale of personal property, and consequently the authorities there are all of this class.

But when an execution is levied on land, the officer making the levy acquires no interest in the land, and is not entitled to its possession. The levy creates a lien only, which may be enforced by a sale, but until sale and deed, the title and right of possession remain in the execution debtor. When a venditioni exponas is issued for the enforcement of this lien, no reason is perceived why it must necessarily be executed by the sheriff who made the levy, and who has gone out of office, and not by his successor. It is accordingly held by some of the American authorities that the venditioni must be executed by the new sheriff. (The Bank of Tennessee v. Beatty, 3 Sneed, 305; Lesley v. Gardner, 3 Watts and Serg. 314); and by others, that it may be executed by either the old or new sheriff. (Holmes v. McIndor, 20 Wis. 657; Sumner v. Moore, 2 McLean, 59; Tarkinton v. Alexander, 2 Dev. and Batt. 87.)

After the records were transferred from the Court of First Instance to the District Court, the latter Court pos*139sessecl as plenary power over the judgments in favor of Starkey, Janion & Co. against Bryant, and the process issued or to be issued thereon, as it could have exercised, had those judgments been rendered in that Court. It is asserted by the plaintiff that the District Court had competent authority to direct and control the Sheriff of the district in the execution of the fi. fas. which had been delivered to him, and it is equally clear, we think, that the Court possessed competent jurisdiction to make all necessary and proper orders in respect to process issued or to be issued upon those judgments. » Had the Sheriff of the district, while the fi. fas. were in liis hands, died or left the State, or become for any reason incoiipetent to act, can there be any doubt that the Court might, by order, have made other provision for the execution of those or other proper writs? If the parties agreed that the writs should be executed by another officer than the Sheriff of the district, or that other writs should be issued upon the judgment, and that they should be executed by the Sheriff of the county, we see no reason to question the validity of an order to that effect made by the District Court. Upon a proper showing that Court had jurisdiction to order such writs to issue as might be necessary for the execution of those judgments, and to direct the Sheriff of the county to execute them. The order of the Court, in evidence in this case, may have been irregular or in some respects erroneous, but as it does not appear upon the face of the record that the Court did not have jurisdiction to make the order, it will be presumed in a collateral attack like the present, that the parties were before the Court, and that the proper proceedings were had to authorize the Court to make the order.

We are of the opinion that the writs in this case were properly executed by the new Sheriff, and that the sale and deeds thereunder were effectual to pass the title, unless they may be impeached for some other reason.

2. It is insisted by counsel for the plaintiff, that the Sheriff’s deeds were not made in conformity to the requirements of section two hundred and seven of the Act of April *14022, 1850, to regulate proceedings in civil cases, and that the Court erred in admitting them in evidence. That section reads as follows: “The officer who shall sell any real estate, or lease of lands and tenements, for more than one year, shall make to the purchaser a deed, to be paid for by the purchaser, reciting the names of the parties to the execution, the date when issued, the date .of the judgment, order or decree, and other particulars as recited in the execution; also a description of the property, the time, place and manner of sale, which recital shall be received as evidence of the facts therein i-ecited.” The general rule is that a sheriff’s deed need not recite the judgment and execution. It is sufficient if it appear that they were the authority under which he acted. (Blood v. Light, 38 Cal. 649; Averill v. Wilson, 4 Barb. 280; Jackson v. Jones, 9 Cow. 182.) When title is to be established through a Sheriff’s deed, the judgment and execution must be introduced in evidence with the deed. This statute makes the recitals evidence of the facts recited, and when the recitals are full, dispenses with the necessity of introducing the judgment and execution. This, we think, was its only purpose and effect. It could not have been intended to make void all deeds from which were omitted some of the recitals named. Precisely the same question, under a statute which differs from the one invoked here only in two unimportant words, was presented to the Supreme Court of Arkansas in Jordan v. Bradshaw, and again in Bettison v. Budd, 17 Ark. 106 and 546, and it was held that a Sheriff’s deed, which failed to recite the judgment, was admissible in evidence, upon proof of the judgment and execution aliunde

In the last named case, the Court said: The statute requires that the deed shall recite the names of the parties to the execution, the date when issued, the date of the judgment, order, or decree, and other particulars recited in the execution; also, a description of the time, place, and manner of sale, and further declares that such recitals shall be received in evidence of the facts therein contained. The obvious intention of this statute was to save the purchaser from the necessity of exhibiting the judgment and *141execution upon the trial, in cases where his rights under such judgment and execution might be called in question, and also to serve as a matter of convenience, as well to the Sheriff as to the purchaser, as it would point the former to his authoritv to sell if he was called on to answer, and would facilitate the latter in deriving his title. The recitals of the deed in this case fall short of the statute, yet it was competent evidence in connection with the judgment and execution, since it recited sufficient to show the authority of the officer to sell.” The Court then quotes the following language from the Lessor of Perkins v. Diffle (10 Ohio, 437): “The law regulating judgments and executions requires that the deed of conveyance, to be made by the Sheriff or other officer, shall recite the execution, or the substance thereof, and the names of the parties, the kind of action, the amount and date of the term of rendition of each judgment, by virtue whereof said lands and tenements were sold,” etc. The deed in the present case recites the execution, the names of the parties, as therein stated, but in reference to the judgment does not again recite their names—neither does it state the amount of the judgment, except as it appears upon the execution. It recites sufficient to show that the officer had authority to sell; and this we hold to be all that is necessary—although in every instance it would be well for a Sheriff or other officer to follow literally the provisions of the statute. So far as the statute makes provision for any recitals, beyond what is necessary to show an authority to sell, we consider it as directory merely..

3. The case shows that when the deeds were produced in evidence—more than sixteen years after they were made— they bore no seals, but it fails to show whether they were, or were not, in fact sealed, at the time they were made. They purported to have been sealed, for they closed with the words: “In witness whereof, I, the said John C. Hayes, Sheriff, have hereunto set my hand and seal,” etc., and were “ signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of" a subscribing witness. The objection was that they “appeared never to have been sealed by the said Hayes.” This objection was overruled, and, so far as we can know from the re*142cord, properly. Upon inspection, it may have appeared to the Court that the deeds were sealed, and that the seals had become detached.

The further objection to two of the deeds that the certificates of acknowledgment which purported to have been made by a Notary Public, "do not.appear to bear his official or other seal, ” may be answered in the same way. Though they bore no official or other seal when exhibited in evidence, it may have been clear that they were properly sealed when made. The objection is met by the rule that he who alleges error, must make it clearly to appear.

4. The point is made that the plaintiff is entitled to recover a portion of the demanded premises, upon the ground that, being a purchaser in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, the conveyance to her will prevail, under the Registry Act, over the prior conveyance by the Sheriff. The point is made upon the following facts: Two of the Sheriff’s deeds were not recorded until the 22d of November, 1853. On the 19th day of the same month, J. J. Bryant, for the expressed consideration of five thousand dollars, conveyed to one Reuben Clark, who afterwards became the husband of the plaintiff, the whole of the demanded premises, and his deed was duly recorded on the same day. It does not appear, however, that Clark took his deed without notice of the unrecorded Sheriff’s deeds, or that he paid any valuable consideration for it. In April, 1855, after the plaintiff had become the wife of • Clark, and in fulfillment of an ante-nuptial contract so to do, and in consideration thereof, Clark conveyed to the plaintiff the premises in controversy, and her deed was acknowledged and in due time placed of record. The plaintiff, being a witness in her own behalf, testified that she had never heard of any adverse claim to the land in controversy, until after the delivery to her, and the recording of her deed. Upon these facts it is claimed that, because the deed to Clark was recorded before the Sheriff’s deeds, the record of the latter did not impart notice of their contents to purchasers from Clark, and that, if he was not a purchaser in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, still' that his *143grantee, who took without notice and for a valuable consideration, would take a good title. In Mahoney v. Middleton, 41 Cal. 41, the same question was presented, and the ruling was adverse to the views now urged by the appellant. We see no reason for changing the ruling here. The other points do not require special notice.

In our opinion the judgment and order should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.

Mr. Justice Crockett, being disqualified, took no part in the decision.