Ball v. Pratt

By the Court,

Morgan, J.

If we consider the under sheriff as the mere agent of the plaintiff in selling the property, there is no difficulty in holding that he would be liable to the purchaser upon an express warranty of title. (Story on Agency, §§ 262, 269.) The question is not without difficulty when we regard him as a public officer. The taking of this property on .the execution against Kirby & Loomis was a trespass. And it was held in the case of The People ex rel. Kellogg v. Schuyler, (4 Comst. 173,) that the seizure of the goods of another than the defendant in the execution was an act of official misconduct on the part of the sheriff and his deputy, for which he and his sureties would be liable upon his official bond. And it was supposed by the chancellor, in delivering the opinion of the court in Burrall v. Acker, (23 Wend. 607, 608,) that an agreement which necessarily implied any breach of duty on the part of the sheriff, was against public policy and void. And Bronson, J. in Browning v. Hanford, (5 Hill, 598,) expressed the opinion that the sheriff cannot take a receipt, or any other contract in rer lotion to the property, which will give him a remedy beyond his own- liability to the creditor. He remarked: “But he cannot go beyond that and take an agreement for any thing more than an indemnity. That would be using his office and *406the process of the court, for the purpose of making a profit or advantage to himself beyond his legal fees.” Eegarding the sale of the property in this case as a breach of duty, as it was held in The People v. Schuyler, could the sheriff o his deputy enter into an agreement with third persons to assist him in the violation of his duty ? Had the sheriff a right to make an engagement beyond his duty as an officer, to warrant the title ? The result would be that he might thereby increase his fees, and under color of his office deprive a third person of his property. Perhaps it might be regarded as oppressive towards third persons to allow the sheriff to take their goods under color of an execution, and enter into contracts with bidders to purchase them under a promise of indemnity. Those who purchase at a sheriff’s sale have no claim to be indemnified, and they really purchase no greater interest than the sheriff can rightfully sell. It is therefore worthy of consideration whether they have any right to contract with the sheriff for a greater interest. If it be said that the sheriff, in warranting the title, warrants it as an individual and not as sheriff, it might with the same apparent propriety be said that, when he sells another’s property instead of that of the defendant in the execution, he sells it as an individual and.not as sheriff. Por the action against him by the owner is not brought against him as sheriff, but is prosecuted against him in his individual character. And yet it seems that such a sale is by virtue of'his office, and renders the sheriff guilty of official misconduct. (4 Comst. 173, before cited.)

How while it is held that any bond of indemnity taken by the sheriff to indemnify him against an action for neglect of duty on his part, is void, (Crocker on Sheriffs, § 764; and see 1 Comst. 365;) and while it is held that the sheriff commits a breach of duty by seizing the goods of a stranger to the execution, (2 Comst. 173,) yet it is held that the sheriff may take a bond of indemnity from the plaintiff in the execution for seizing and selling a stranger’s property, and recover *407upon it, if he is afterwards mulcted in damages. (Crocker, § 763. Gardner, J. in The People v. Schuyler, 2 Comstock, 183.)

And the statutes of this state contain provisions recognizing the right of the sheriff to protect himself hy a bond of indemnity for seizing property which his process does not authorize him to take. (2 R. S. 4, §§ 10, 11.) The same right is recognized in numerous cases, and it is too late to call it in question. Gardner, J. in delivering the opinion of the court in The People v. Schuyler, (4 Comst. 183,) remarked: The action of trespass against sheriffs for the seizure of property in the execution of legal process, is sui generis. It is regarded in the law, in many instances, as a means of determining the title to property, rather than in the light of an ordinary trespass. Good faith on the part of the officer is presumed, and he may consequently require and receive indemnity.”

It follows, I think, that although the sheriff is guilty of a breach of official duty in selling the property of a stranger to the execution, and can claim no protection under his execution when sued in trespass for the wrong, yet he may take a bond from the plaintiff, in such a case, to indemnify him for an act which is held in some cases to he a breach of duty. Such a bond is not within the prohibition of the statute, nor against public policy, because the sheriff is supposed to act in good faith, and the suit is regarded as a proper one to try the title to the property. It is not a trespass wholly unauthorized by law, although it subjects the sheriff to all the consequences of a naked trespass, so far as the owner of the goods is concerned. Without stopping to reconcile the cases, it is enough to say that the sheriff, if he acts in good faith, can lawfully take an agreement from the plaintiff to protect him for seizing the goods of a stranger to the execution. But he cannot go beyond that and take an agreement for any thing more than an indemnity. (Bronson, J. in Browning v. Hanford, 5 Hill, 598.)

*408The case in hand shows that the sheriff took such an indemnity, and he declared to the bidders that he had it in his pocket, and when the bidders refused to bid on the property for the reason that they distrusted the title, he volunteered to warrant a good-title, on his own personal responsibility.

It'will be observed that he had no authority from the plaintiff to give such a warranty. Hor could he take from the plaintiff an indemnity to protect the purchaser, without violating’ the rule already established; which is, that the sheriff can only take an indemnity for his own protection.

It was not necessary for his protection that he should protect the bidders at the sale. The law simply allows the officer to protect himself, as it is supposed he acts in good faith when he seizes a stranger’s property, and is therefore entitled to be indemnified, by the plaintiff, for whose benefit he takes the responsibility. He is allowed to do this as an officer in the discharge of what he believes to be an official duty, although if .he is mistaken it is, at least constructively, an act of official misconduct which would make his sureties liable upon his .official bond.

In this position,- having, as the case shows, been guilty of an-act of trespass in seizing and selling property not belonging to the defendant in the execution, and the same act being a breach of official duty, the sheriff goes a step further and undertakes to-, make a contract with the bidders, that if they will buy- the property he will guaranty a good title. Belying upon the personal guaranty of the sheriff, the plaintiff in this action bids off the lumber and pays the sheriff the amount of the bid.

It is already seen that the sheriff cannot use the plaintiff’s indemnity to protect such a guaranty, for that is not an official act, in any sense, and is not necessary for the sheriff’s protection. But it is apparent that the sheriff may be benefited by such a bargain. Its object is to induce bidders to raise their bids; and its effect is to increase the fees of the sheriff. Such an agreement with bidders at the sale, is *409therefore simply an arrangement by which the sheriff, for no other benefit to himself than an increase of his legal fees, undertakes to guaranty the title to the property sold.

It is very likely that the deputy in this case supposed that he could safely warrant the title; and that the plaintiff’s bond of indemnity would enable him to protect himself if he was subjected to damages in consequence of his warranty. It is also probable that the plaintiff here, who hid off the property upon the faith of the warranty, supposed that the deputy had an indemnity, which would enable him to reimburse himself if he was subjected to damages for a breach of the warranty. But all these parties must be charged with knowledge of the law. And if I understand the law, the sheriff could not give an indemnity which could only benefit him by an increase of his fees; and which both he and the bidders must have known he had no right to give as a public officer. It is not for the sake of the sheriff as an individual that the law relieves him from such a contract; but the contract is one which purchasers at a sheriff’s sale have no right to take from the officer, whose duties are prescribed by law; and who cannot with safety to the public be allowed to contract for any benefit to himself, beyond what a faithful discharge of his official duties entitles him to. The sheriff, while in the discharge of his official duties, cannot divest himself of his official character, and do as an individual what he cannot do as a public officer.

It is doubtless true that he may become the agent of the plaintiff, to a certain extent, and take responsibilities which go heyond his strict official duty, when he acts in good faith and in the supposed discharge of his duty as an officer; and that the plaintiff may protect him in doing so. But he cannot increase his fees by entering into a personal engagement on his individual account, which he is not allowed to do as a public officer. The policy of the law will not allow him to do more than his official duty with a view to increase his fees and emoluments. It cannot change the principle, because it *410happens that he has made a had bargain. He did not, in this case, expect to lose by it; and the law is violated just as effectually whether he makes or loses by it.

[Onondaga General Term, April 1, 1862.

MulUn, Morgan and Sacón, Justices.]

But it is obvious that the same considerations do not apply to other parties; and there does not appear to be any objection to a warranty of title on the part of the plaintiff in the execution. The rule is intended to keep public officers within the line of their duties, and not allow them to take advantage of their official position to make money by entering into engagements which tempt them to abuse the process of the courts, and oppress those who are to be affected by their official proceedings. In my opinion, the contract of the under sheriff with the plaintiff, in this case, to warrant the title of the property, necessarily resulted in increasing the fees of the sheriff. It was a contract to benefit the sheriff for doing something beyond his official duty, and therefore void as against public policy.

The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted; costs to abide the event.

Judgment accordingly.