*166 By the Court.
Lumpkin, J.delivering the opinion.
[1.] It is difficult to execute, literally, the fee bill of 1792, ■and the Acts amendatory thereof, from the fact that the Legislature evidently had in their mind a case only where money should be raised upon a single fi. fa. In such case, it is a simple proceeding to graduate the commissions according to the size of the execution. That is, in the language of the law, “ On all sums where the execution does not exceed 64 dollars and 28 cents, 6-J per cent, on the amount of property sold ; on all sums above 64 dollars and 28 cents, where the «execution does not exceed 428 and 56 cents, 3J; and on all sums where the execution exceeds 428 dollars and 56 cents, 1£.” (Cobb’s Digest, 350, 351.)
In this case, near four thousand dollars was raised from the sale of the defendants’ property, and paid over to the various liens in the hands of the Sheriff, consisting of executions and orders in attachment; of which seventy-three were in amount under sixty-four dollars and twenty-eight cents; and -eight exceeded sixty-four dollars and twenty-eight cents, and were under four hundred and twenty-eight dollars and fifty-six cents. There were no fi. fas. or attachments above that sum.
Judge Hardeman, with that strong sense of right which usually characterizes his decisions, and considering what the law ought to be, namely: to fix the fees by the amount of sales, irrespective of the size of the process, restricted the commissions to 1J per cent. And we believe that a similar rule has been adopted in other circuits. And yet, perhaps, there is none which is a wider departure from the letter of the Statute, as it is written. While the Act remains as it is, some practice must be pursued which will have reference to the amount of the liens under which the property is sold; otherwise, the law is set at naught.
In some of the Judicial Districts, the plan has been to allow commissions on every fi. fa. according to the amount *167thereof; and while this construction best subserves the letter of the law, and is, perhaps, in accordance with the rule suggested by this Court in Aycock vs. Buffington, (2 Kelly, 268,) still, in our opinion, the compensation is excessive in a case like the present, where there are seventy-three executions and attachments under 64 dollars and "28 cents. In every such case, the lion’s share of the proceeds goes to the officer.
If we were at liberty to prescribe a rule, which would meet the justice of the case, and at the same time comply with the-spirit of the Statute, it would be this: That up to the sum of" 64 dollars and 28 cents, the Sheriff should receive 6J percent. ; between that amount and 428 dollars and 56 cents, 3J; and upon the balance of the fund 1J. And we are clear,, that in no case should commissions be charged upon the surplus remaining in the hands of the Sheriff. He is prohibited,, tinder severe penalties, from making excessive levies. And. it is impolitic to tempt him to violate his duty.