It appears from the fads conceded in thi» case, that after the plaintiffs, by an agreement with Lewis, t!>c debtor in the execution, had taken a mortgage to secure the same, and had also agreed to suspend the levy of it, for n¡ne months, they put the same, it being in full life, into the hands of David Bird, a deputy of the defendant, to server according to law; that Bird failed to levy and collect the execution ; and he now relies on this agreement between the plaintiffs and the debtor, for his justification. I am of opinion, that this constitutes no defence. As between the plaintiffs and the debtor it was no bar to collect the execution, any more than an agreement to suspend the collection of a note, could be a bar to a suit on the note. It was no payment, satisfaction or discharge of the execution ; and the. debtor could have had no relief by audita querela. The execution was permitted, by the parties, to remain in force, and the debtor could never have had any remedy, but by an action for a violation of the agreement to suspend the collection of it. The charge of the court, then, that if the jury found the agreement, they must find for the defendant, was incorrect. As the judgment must be reversed on this ground, it is unnecessary to consider the other questions arising on the record.
Goui'd, J.There is one point in the case, so clear, as to dispense with the consideration of any of the others. The agreement claimed to have been made between the attorney to the bank, and Lewis, the defendant in the execution, could, upon no principle, constitute a defence to the action. And if so, both the admission of the evidence to this point, and the direction of the court below, upon it, were erroneous. If such an agreement had been made, (as this, it is said, may have been,) even after the delivery of the execution to the sheriff’s deputy ; yet he being a stranger to the arrangement, and having no direction from the hank, to conform to it — ^should be at a loss to discover how he could avail himself of it. But it appears, from dates, that tiie delivery of the execution to the officer, was subsequent to the alleged agreement. And at all events, if the fact was otherwise, it was incumbent upon the defendant to show' it: otherwise, his defence cannot be complete, upon his own principles. Taking the supposed agreement, then, as we *419must, to lihve been prior to the delivery of the execution to the officer — the latter act, implying, as it did, a direction to the officer, to proceed, according to the exigency of the writ, was, ipso facto, a revocation of the agreement, or at least, a tacit refusal, on the part of the bank, to abide by it. And if any honourary, or legal compact with the execution-debtor has thus been violated j it is an affair between himself and flic bank. The officer has no concern with it. If there was an agreement made, binding in honour only ; a court of law cannot take cognizance of it. And if it was obligatory in law, the debtor might sue for any violation of it: but the question cannot be tried between these parties. Without occupying time, therefore, upon the other points in the case, 1 am clearly of opinion, upon this single, detached ground, that the judgment is erroneous.
'Hie other Judges were of the same opinion, except Chap-max, J. who gave no opinion, not having heard the arguments of counsel.Judgment to be reversed.