This was an action against a constable for the sale and conversion of certain chattels alleged to be the property of the plaintiffs, who were respectively the trustee and the administrator of the beneficiary in a deed of trust. The answer denied the plaintiffs’ property and justified under legal process. There was a trial before the court, sitting as a jury, which found that the law and the facts were in favor of the defendant and judgment was entered accordingly.
It appears from the evidence that on the fourth •day of January, 1879, William M. Blakeley sold to Clark and Martin two mules, a wagon and a stock •of hogs and cattle upon a credit, taking their promissory note, payable November 1st, 1879, and secured by a deed of trust, duly acknowledged and recorded, upon the property purchased, as also upon their crops to be raised during that year. In May, 1879, one Gibson brought an action on a contract against Blakeley for $205. 75, before a justice of the peace and sued out an attachment, which came to the hands of the defendant to be executed and was by him levied on the mules, wagon, hogs, and cattle above mentioned-The affidavit for attachment alleged the non-residence of Blakeley as the ground for praying the writ, and it and the bond conformed substantially to the statute. A warning order was published for Blakeley, and Kelso, the trustee in the deed of trust, was appointed his attorney ad litem. Afterwards, Blakeley’s death was suggested and upon motion of Gibson’s attorney, Kelso was appointed his administrator ad litem. There is no proof in the record that Kelso was present in the court of the justice of the peace when these proceedings were had, nor that he accepted either of said appointments,. He says himself, that when approached on the subject by Gibson’s attorney befoie the appointment was made, he distinctly declined to act, and that he had never recived any notification of the fact that he had been so appointed, except that the justice had mentioned it to him in conversation.
In October, 1879, judgment was rendered by the justice ■against Blakeley for the debt, and the property that had been attached by the constable was condemed to be sold for its satisfaction ; the bond for restitution of the property, or its value, in case the defendant should, within five years, •appear in court and have judgment set aside, having been (first filed. (See Gantt’s Dig., sec. 4727, clause 2).
On the same day the following order of sale was issued:
State of Arkansas, County of Columbia.
John K. Gibson, vs. W. M. Blakeley.
To J. B. Wise, Constable Buena Vista Township :
Whereas, J. XL Gibson has sustained his attachment in my court against W. M. Blakeley, you are commanded to «ell the property attached, (describing it j.
[Signed]
L. W. Payne, J. P.
The property was sold under this order and produced ($111, which was paid oyer to Gibson’s attorney.
inlunject^to on-execution. This court, in Trapnall’s Admix, v. State Bank, Ark., 63, decided that the estate of the mortgagee land, before foreclosure or entry, is not the subject of -eeution, even after default and when the condition of the mortgage has been broken. The same rule applies with -equal force to mortgages or deeds of trust upon personal property. Being mere pledges for the security of a debt, they are discharged when the debt is paid; title is revested, without further formality, in the mortgagor or grantor, and any title acquired by the levy of a creditor of the mortgagee is defeated. And not being subject to execution, it follows that the mortgagee’s right is not subject to attachment, which is but a preliminary execution. Grubbs v. Ellyson, 23 Ark., 287.
and ceslül QUE of j^tpropertyThe first of the pleas above mentioned was probably in-1 ^ tended to raise the question whether the trustee and the beneficiary of a trust have such an interest in the trust property as to maintain trover for its conversion. That question must be considered to be foreclosed in this court by the case of Robinson v. Kruse, 29 Ark., 575; see also Prout v. Root, 116 Mass., 410—a case similar to this in its essential features.
uaUiTitv ofproeess! But it is upon the plea of justification as a ministerial of^cer a°ting hi the execution of legal process, that the defendant mainly relies to sustain the judgment below.
Since the case of Savacoal v. Boughton, 5 Wendell, 170, it may be taken as settled that the law throws its protecting' shield around officers executing the mandates of its courts,, so long as they do only what they are commanded to do, without requiring them to determine whether it is rightly and properly commanded or not.
Hence an officer acting under process fair upon its .face- and issuing from a tribunal or person having judicial powers, with apparent jurisdiction to issue such process, is justified in obeying it, against all irregularities and illegalities, except his own. In the notes to that case, 21 Am. Dec., 190, and Big. Lea. Cas. on Torts, 277, may be found a satisfactory exposition of this doctrine with its-qualifications and limitations.
Now, however regular the process may be, it will not justify a seizure of the property of the wrong person, or the wrong property of the right person. Take the familiar case where, on process against A., the officer levies on the-goods of B,, or seizes and sells property of the debtor which is by law exempt from execution. In all cases where-the writ commands the officer to make certain sums of money, out of the property of a person named, without specifying the property to be seized, the officer has to determine, at his own peril, in the first place, whether the property which he proposes to seize is the property of the defendant in the writ; and secondly, whether it is legally liable to be so taken. And against the consequences- of an. erroneous exercise of his judgment in the determination of these questions, the courts can afford himno protection. He is liable to actions for injuries growing out of such mistakes, irrespective of the innocence of his intent, Freeman on Executions, § 272; See Atkinson v. Gatcher, 23 Ark., 101; Buck v. Colbath, 3 Wall., 335; Sanborn v. Hamilton, 18 Vt., 590.
In the case in hand, the writ under which the defendant acted was an order of general attachment, commanding him to attach the property of Blakeley, Under the mandatory clause of this process, he attached property, the legal title to which was in Kelso, and the beneficial ownership in Clark and Martin, but in which Blakeley had not the vestige of a title, either legal or equitable. Did the law command him to do this? Assuredly not. But it left him to find out for himself whether Blakeley had any leviable interest in this or any other property. Can any court protect him against a prosecution by the party aggrieved?' Not at all; because no court is responsible for the manner-in which he exercised that discretion which the law reposed in him alone. He could not have been sued for a refusal to levy upon this particular property. And if he had any doubts whether it was subject to execution, he could have-demanded of the plaintiff in the attachment a bond of indemnity. Gantt's Big., secs. 2650-1.
The officer is bound to know the law and bound also to-know the contents of his process.
In truth this plea of justification did not even aver that, the goods were the property of the defendant in the writ of: attachment. This was a fatal defect, Buck v. Colbath, supra.
So then the original taking was unlawful, because it was-an unauthorized intermeddling with the goods of a third-person not named in the writ. And this, when followed by a sale, is air unauthorized disposal of the goods of another,, which is another name for conversion, Garland v. Carlisle. 4, Cl. and Fin., 721, Cooper v. Chilly, 1 Burr., 20, per Lord Mansfield; Calkins v. Lockwood, 17 Conn., 154; Billiter v. Young, 6 El. and Bl., 1.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.