The suit is on a forthcoming bond, payable to the plaintiff as constable, and conditioned to be void, upon the delivery up of a specified amount of seed-cotton found on the premises of one of the defendants, John Counts. The breach averred is the refusal to deliver this property. The constable was acting under process purporting to be a search-warrant, issued by a justice of the peace, which he desisted from executing upon the making of this bond. The main defense set up is the want of any consideration in the instrument.
It is not contended that the - obligation has any validity as a statutory bond, for such a bond is entirely unauthorized by the statute. If the process under which the constable was acting, was not void, it was his duty to take possession of the property described, and to place it in the custody of the magistrate, subject to his orders as a court. ILe had no authority to leave the property in the possession of the person from whom it was taken, or to take a bond for its forthcoming. — Code, 1876, §§ 4005, 4021. The writing, then, can be good only as a common-law bond, if it possesses any legal validity at all.
We do not 'doubt that the process, under which the constable was acting, was void on its face, and that he was a trespasser in attempting to execute it. A search-warrant can issue only on probable .ground, supported by affidavit, naming or describing the person, and particularly describing the property and the place to be searched, all of which was substantially required at common law. — Code, § 4007. The only three grounds upon which it is authorized to issue are specified in section 4006 of the Code : 1st, to recover stolen or embezzled property ; 2d, to recover property which may have been used as a means of committing a felony ; 3d, to recover property which is in the possession of one with the intent of so using it, or of one to whom he may have delivered it for the purpose of concealment. — Code, § 4006.
Neither the affidavit, nor the magistrate’s warrant, brings the case within any of these classes. The only averment or recital made is, that the affiant “ has lost seed-cotton, talmn from off his farm, and that he thinks it has been carried to the pens of Mack Sims, Paddy Terry, and Shannon, on Counts’ farm, and that he has some small pieces of paper in the cotton with the figure 5 on them.” A mere cursory inspection shows patent defects in the paper, which render the process void on its face. It conferred no authority, therefore, upon the constable, *554who became a trespasser in the execution of it. — Noles v. The State, 24 Ala. 672; Cary's case, 76 Ala. 78.
The case for consideration then, as made by the pleadings, is that of a mere trespasser, without legal authority, undertaking to seize the property of a citizen, and allowing him to retain possession of his own property, upon his executing a bond to have it forthcoming at a time and place stated. The argument is, that the defendants are estopped from showing by parol proof a want of consideration, because it contradicts the recital in the bond that the property is that of the affiant, who is the beneficial plaintiff in the suit, and that the defendant was allowed to retain the property on the faith of the execution of the bond.
The fact that the instrument is under seal does not preclude any inquiry into the existence of a consideration, as at common law; for the statute expressly authorizes a defendant, by plea, to impeach or inquire into the consideration of a sealed instrument, in the same manner as if it had no seal. — Code, § 2981. The bond in the present case, then, can stand on no higher ground'than anon-negotiable simple contract in writing, or one not under seal. The rule as to such writings, when executory, is, that a want of consideration may always be proved, even by parol evidence, to show that the agreement has no binding force or efficacy. — 1 Green], Ev. § 284. The recital of a consideration is only prima facie true between the parties, and may be rebutted.
A consideration is essential to every valid executory contract, .and may be defined to be, “ that which one party to a contract gives, or does, or promises, in exchange for what is given en-done or promised by the other party.” — 1 Whart. Contr. § 493. We cau perceive no element of a valuable consideration in this case moving from the plaintiff, who is the obligee of the bond. The property which he is about to seize is admitted, by the demurrers to the plea, to belong to the defendant, and not to the affiant, Coekburn. The plaintiff, then, suffered no detriment by desisting from its seizure, for by such an act he would have been a trespasser. lie parted with nothing, and did not suspend or forbear a legal right, as he would have done had the process been valid. Permitting one to retain possession of his own property, with which he has never parted, on his promise to deliver it to a trespasser, who has no lawful right to take or seize it, is the plainest possible illustration of a promise void for want of any legal consideration.
There is no room for any estoppel to operate here, because no recital or admission has been made, nor any act done by the defendants, a denial or revocation of which will in any manner prejudice the plaintiff. Neither the legal rights nor the status *555of the parties will' be changed by the denial of the plaintiff’s title to the property in question. The only act of the plaintiff, based on this admission, was the forbearance on his part to commit a trespass; and this is not such a consideration as will be recognized by law as conferring a legal right, or closing one’s mouth against pleading the truth.
The pleas set up were a full defense to the action, and the court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to them.
For this error the judgment of the Circuit Court must be reversed, and the cause remanded.