This was.an action at law upon an attachment bond, for the recovery of a large sum of money, in which appellant obtained a judgment against appellees for five dollars as damages and the costs, in February, 1874. The costs amounted to a sum exceeding $900; and a writ of execution, issued for the damages and costs, was levied on property of one of the defendants, who thereupon paid to the sheriff the amount. While the writ was in the sheriff’s hands appellant’s counsel told him orally not to make the amount of the- damages, because he intended to take an appeal to this court — but gave him no written instructions by endorsement on the writ or otherwise, not to do so; and after the whole was collected he received from the sheriff a large part of the costs, in discharge of the witness fees which the appellant had paid to his own witnesses and for which he had the certificates issued by the clerk to them. The rest of the sum collected was doubtless paid to the other witnesses and the officials entitled thereto. This was in 1874. Afterwards, in 1876, this appeal was taken; and a motion is now made to dismiss it for the reasons that the payment of the judgment had been coerced by appellant.
It is well settled as the practice of this court, that if a judgment be rendered in favor of a party in a lower court, especially in an action at law, and he coerces or receives payment’ of the amount thereof, he will not be permitted to maintain an appeal from the same judgment to set it aside, in this court. And, even if a judgment of reversal had been rendered here, in the appeal, before the court is informed that such payment had been made, this court, on being advised thereof, will withhold the certificate of reversal and set aside its judgment, if the money collected be not, within a time to be prescribed by it, paid back to the appellee.- —Hall v. Hrabrowski, 9 Ala. 278 ; Bradford v. Bush, 10 Ala. 274; Knox v. Steele, 18 Ala. 815.
True, this is a power which will not be exercised in some peculiar cases from the courts of probate or chancery courts, in which it is apparent or admitted that the appellants are entitled to recover all they have received and perhaps more. But the present is not a case of that sort.
It is not pretended that the clerk of the city court of Montgomery Avas not authorized to issue the writ of execution. It Avas his duty to do so, if not instructed otherwise by the *356" plaintiff or Ms counsel. And the sheriff, to whom the execution came, was required by the precept to make the whole amount mentioned in it, of the defendants. If it was intended that he should be restrained from doing so, the writ of execution should have been withdrawn, or an indorsement made on it to that effect.
The costs was no less a part of the judgment of the court in favor of the plaintiff, than the damages; and in this case, as we„have seen, it was very much the most important part of it. If upon a new trial, the verdict should be in favor of defendants below, the appellees in this court, those costs would all have to be paid by appellant. And how can we know that they would then be able to recover them from him ? Appellant can not be permitted to coerce satisfaction of such a judgment from his adversaries, and then appeal to this court to reverse and vacate it as erroneous.
The appeal must be dismissed.
Stone, J., not sitting..