This was an action on the case instituted by plaintiffs in error against the defendant in error in the district court of the county of Santa Ee. The plaintiffs in error filed their declaration against the defendant in error, at the August term, 1887, alleging that at the July term, 1884, of said court, they obtained a decree against the Texas, Santa Ee & Northern Railroad Company, for $1,346.37, with $100 attorneys’ fees, and $89.75 costs; that afterward, to wit, at the February term, 1887, of said court, “by the consideration of said court, the decree entered at the July term, 1884, was duly docketed, as provided by law, for the sum of sixteen hundred and forty-six dollars and sixty cents, and costs, eighty-nine dollars and seventy-five cents.” That afterward, on the fourteenth day of March, 1887, an execution was issued on said judgment, directed to the defendant in error, as sheriff of Santa Ee county. That defendant in error levied said execution on the property of the defendant company, amounting in value to $3,000. That said defendant in error, disregarding his duty as such sheriff, failed to sell the property so levied upon, and returned said writ after it had expired, unsatisfied. That afterward, to wit, on the sixth of June, 1887, the plaintiffs in error caused the venditioni exponas to be issued to the defendant in error, commanding him to sell said property so levied upon; and that said defendant in error refused to execute this writ, to their damage, etc. The defendant filed two pleas to this declaration, the first, a general plea of not guilty; in a second plea, he undertakes to justify his refusal to obey the mandate of the court. It is, in effect, a plea of confession and avoidance, and sets up substantially the following defense: He admits that he was, at the time charged, sheriff of Santa Fe county. That he received into his hands the execution set out in the declaration. That he levied the same upon certain goods and chattels, which he was informed and believed belonged to the defendant company, but was notified by said company that it did not own, plaim, or have any interest in said property; and for that reason the property was not sold. That said execution was returned, and thereupon a venditioni exponas was issued by the clerk, and the property which had been formerly levied upon advertised to be sold. That upon the day appointed for the sale he was notified by the president of the defendant company that said goods were not the property of the said company, and was also notified by the Southern Trust Company, of New York, that said goods belonged to the said trust company, which forbade the sale thereof. That thereupon he gave notice to the attorney of the plaintiff, that, unless an indemnifying bond “in double the value of the property was executed to this defendant, that such property would not be sold.” That'the plaintiffs in error refused to execute such bond, and thereupon he adjourned the sale. To this plea plaintiffs filed their replication denying that the property levied upon belonged to the trust company, and averring that the property belonged to the railroad company; and, further, that they, the plaintiffs in error, tended to the defendant in error a good and sufficient indemnifying bond in double the amount of the judgment. On this state of the pleadings the parties went to trial. On the trial of the cause the plaintiffs in error offered to read as evidence to the jury the execution issued upon the original judgment. To this the defendant in error objected, on the ground that the execution offered in evidence did not agree in amount with the original judgment. This objection being sustained by the court, they moved for leave to correct the execution, so as to make it conform in amount to the judgment. This motion was also denied. "They also offered in evidence the original and last or “docketed” decree of the court, the judgment docket, etc., all of which, except the original judgment, was, on the objection of the defendant, excluded. The court thereupon instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, which was accordingly done.
Execution: judgment: variance: In this we think there was error. It is admitted that the execution differed in amount from the judgment on which it was issued. It is insisted by the defendant in error that this variance rendered the process void, and some authorities are cited which seem to support this view. We think, however, that the weight of authorities is to the contrary. In Herman on Executions, section 65, under the head of “Void Executions,” the author mentions, among other defects that render the process void, “a misrecital as to date and amount,” citing Albee v. Ward, 8 Mass. 19. The same author, however, in section 66, declares: “Whenever an execution varies from the judgment on which it issued, it may be amended by the judgment so as to conform to it; and, where there is an error as to the amount to be collected, it may be amended at any time, even on the return day, or after its return.” It is claimed by the defendant in error, that while such a writ, as between the judgment creditor and debtor, may be amended, yet it can not’ be so amended as to charge the officer refusing to execute it in its defective form. In our opinion, however, the officer’s liability depends, not so much upon the regularity, as upon the validity, of the process. The true rule is stated as follows: “When a writ from a court of competent jurisdiction is placed in an officer’s hands, he is bound to execute it according to the exigency of the writ, without inquiry into the regularity of the proceedings upon which it was grounded. Nor can he refuse because in his opinion it is irregular, or that the sum varies from the amount for which the judgment was rendered.” Id., section 146; Parmelee v. Hitchcock, 12 Wend. 96. “The cases recognize and affirm a distinction between process which is void, and that which is merely voidable, and it is repeatedly stated that, when a process is void, the sheriff is not bound to execute it, nor liable for any neglect, partial or total. But otherwise, if the process is voidable only; because, if the defendant in the execution does not seek to avoid the process, and where the court might, if applied to, allow an amendment, the sheriff can not avail himself of the defect in the process.” Freem. Ex’ns, sec. 103.
Li^fOTTrefusaieto proo'fburden of Having determined that the process, though irregular, was not void, and that it was the duty of the sheriff to have executed it, we proceed next to inquire if the justification set out in his second plea is sufficient to protect the defendant in error. Omitting the details, the substance of this defense is that the defendant corporation disclaimed the ownership of the property, and that the same was claimed by a foreign corporation. This was not sufficient. The property' levied on was in the possession of the defendant corporation; the defendant recites in his return of the original writ that he believed it to belong to the defendant company. “When an officer sues a defendant against whom he holds an execution in possession of property, it is his duty to make a levy, unless he knows that the apparent is different from the real ownership.” Id., sec. 252.
Possession of personal property being prima facie evidence of ownership, whenever it is shown that the sheriff had knowledge that the defendant in execution was possessed of personal property, and he fails to levy upon it, the burden of proof is upon him to show that the property was not subject to execution.” Taylor v. Wimer, 30 Mo. 129.
EfndemaTfyingy' The plaintiffs in error, however, tendered the officer a good and sufficient indemnifying bond in a sum equal to double the amount of the judgment. This the officer declined to accept, because it was not m amount sufficient to cover the value of the property levied upon. In this, we think, the officer was in error. The law authorized him to levy upon only so much property as would be sufficient to satisfy the execution. If he had made an excessive levy, his demand upon the plaintiffs in error was, in effect, that they should not only indemnify him against the consequences of a mistaken ownership of the property, but against his own wrong in having made an excessive levy. A case might occur in which an officer finding but one item of property, and that largely in excess in value of the process to be satisfied, would be entitled to indemnity commensurate with the value of the property levied upon. The extraordinary schedule of property levied on in this case, however, shows that the demand of the defendant in error was unreasonable. The following schedule shows the character and items of property levied upon to satisfy the execution, amounting to $1,733.97, to wit: “Two locomotives, one designated as ‘No. 5/ the other by name as ‘General Meily; ’ one baggage and express car, numbered 15; two passenger coaches, numbered respectively, 10 and 12; eight freight covered cars, numbered * * *; nine flat ears, numbered * * *; three coal cars, numbered * * *; 40,-000 feet of manufactured lumber and bridge timber; eighty-five large piles; 7,000 ties; 2,300 splices; one barrel of bolts for splices; forty-seven kegs of railroad spikes; 301 long T rails, and fifty-eight common rails; also all the roadbed and right of way from the southern end of the track of said company’s road at Santa Fe to the northern line of Santa Fe county; also the ties and rails in place in said roadbed within the county of Santa Fe.” The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded to the lower court, with directions to permit the plaintiffs in error to make such amendments of the execution as will make it conform to the judgment upon which it was issued.