It is clear, by Judge Armstrong’s memorandum attached to defendant’s request for findings, that the proof on the trial of the case was to the effect that the plaintiff in the suit of McCarthy v. Lyons directed the defendant herein, as sheriff, to levy upon the piano as the property of Emma Lyons, and that the sheriff did so, and sold the same, without any knowledge of the admitted fact that Emma Lyons had no interest whatever in the property so levied upon and sold. It was also proved that after the sale, and before his return of the execution, the sheriff first found out that Emma Lyons was not the owner of the piano, and thac thereupon he delivered the same to the Capital City Music Company, the real owner, and returned the money he had collected on the sale to *219the purchaser thereat. Upon these proofs, we do not understand that the learned judges who presided in turn during the various stages of the trial of the case disagree. The record and its recitals, by Judge Armstrong, that the proofs were as defendant requested the court to find, justify this statement. But we do understand that they are much at variance with one another both as-legal competency of such proofs, and as to the legal effect to be given them if competent. It appears to us that the wrong complained of by plaintiff (respondent) is the failure of the sheriff to turn over to plaintiff a sufficient amount of money realized from the sale of the piano to satisfy the execution issued in the case of McCarthy v. Lyons; and we are satisfied that, under the answer of defendant, he could prove that the piano was not the property Emma Lyons when attached, nor ever after, and that such proof would be competent evidence that defendant is in no default, but would have been guilty of conversion had he complied with plaintiff’s wishes and paid him the money. We therefore think the evidence of defendant upon this branch of the case was properly admitted on the trial, but improperly disregarded in the findings adopted. It is well established that an officer is under no duty — indeed, he has no right — to execute a process delivered to him for service by seizure of the property of a person against whom the process does not run. (Gallup v. Robinson, 11 Gray 20.) Furthermore, if a sheriff fails or omits to levy an execution upon goods which did not at the time of the attachment, or afterwards, belong to the debtor, though they had been attached as the property of the debtor, he will not be guilty of any negligence or misconduct at law, and the creditor has no cause of action therefor. And in such an instance it is a good defense, where the officer is sued, to prove paramount title in another. (Canada v. Southwick, 16 Pick. 556; Governor v. Gibson, 14 Ala. 326.) This doctrine is reasonable, for, if the judgment debtor in truth has no personal property within the county of the sheriff, why should that officer, assuming he has acted in good faith, be required to pay the judgment of the attaching creditor ? (Lummis v. Kasson, *22043 Barb. 373.) The statute (section 320, div. 1, Compiled Statutes 1887), as if to protect a sheriff against liability in trespass for levying upon the personal property of a third party, if such a party claims the property seized, makes it obligatory upon that official to deliver the property levied upon to the claimant, after notice, unless the plaintiff gives him a good bond to indemnify him against loss or damage by reason of holding such property. And if he must turn over property levied upon, when claimed on oath by a third person, unless indemnified, on what principle should he be compelled to apply the proceeds of the sale of the property of a third person towards payment of the debt of the creditor, where he, in all good faith, has only ascertained after such sale that the property has always belonged to. a third person, and never did to the judgment debtor ? The learned judge who made the findings and conclusions of law in the case upon which judgment was predicated doubtless recognized these principles above stated, but believed that they were inapplicable to the facts, because the sheriff, having made a return of a levy and sale of the piano as the property of Emma Lyons, was estopped from afterwards saying that it was not her property, and hence his payment of the proceeds to the purchaser, and his return of the piano to the Capital City Music Company, were unauthorized by law, and did not release him from his ooligation to. pay the amount of the plaintiff’s judgment to him. The judge was also of the opinion that the sheriff had no authority ‘ ‘ to amend his return as attempted by him to be done, as it would have been amending such return so as to state the facts different from what they really were; and, as a legal proposition, an officer can only amend his return so as to make the return correctly set forth what was actually done, and not to change the attitude or status of the parties. ’ ’ But, if we concede that the officer could not make the amended return he did, because it contradicted the fact of a levy and sale, —a proposition which we need only concede for the purposes of this opinion, — we nevertheless lelieve that his defense of paramount title was admissible notwithstanding the first re*221turn he made. By it the sheriff recited the actual facts of his levy and sale, and of his subsequent return of the money to the purchaser because the piano did not belong to the defendant named in the execution. There is nothing inconsistent with this return and the fact proved, that the knowledge that Emma Lyons did not own the piano only came to him after the execution sale. So that his attitude upon the trial and as disclosed by his return are not in conflict with one another; and the return, so far as it goes, conforms to the proof. The case is thus brought within the rule laid down in Hopkins v. Chandler, 17 N. J. Law, 299, that a sheriff is not, by levy and sale, estopped from denying the plaintiff’s right to the proceeds of the sale, nor from showing that the property sold under the plaintiff’s- execution was not the defendant’s, nor liable to such levy and sale. We quote the following pertinent language from the opinion of Chief Justice Hornblower in that case : ‘ ‘ It comes then to this question : Can a sheriff, after levying upon property and selling it under an execution, withhold the money from the plaintiff, and successfully resist an amercement for not paying it over, upon the ground that the property levied upon and sold by him belonged to other persons than the defendant, and were not liable to the plaintiff’ s execution ? An amercement comes in the place of an action at law for money had and received, and if, in such, an action, the facts stated in the case were clearly proved or admitted, we should have no difficulty, perhaps, in saying the plaintiffs ought not to recover. It would seem to be unreasonable, if a sheriff by mistake should sell property not liable to a plaintiff’s execution, that he should be compelled to pay the money to the plaintiff, and be left to respond to the owner of the property. And, upon this view of the subject, there would seem to be no good reason why, in a plain case, such as this strikes me to be, we should not, upon a motion for amercement, make a similar decision. * * * The first question, then, is whether the sheriff is estopped by his levy and sale from denying the plaintiff’s right to this money ? I think not. In an action against him, he would be at liberty to *222show that the property was subject to prior liens which had exhausted the proceeds; and I can see no reason why he might not be permitted to show that he levied and sold by mistake, under the plaintiff’s execution, property that was not liable to such seizure and sale.” (See, also, Harris v. Kirkpatrick, 35 N. J. Law, 392; Crock, on Sheriff, § 853; Commonwealth v. Booker, 6 Dana 443; Freeman on Executions, § 304.) It may be that a sheriff cannot, by averments of his pleading, impugn the verity of his official return; yet he is often allowed to prove other facts consistent with it, but tending to exonerate him from a liability apparently created by it. (Murfree on Sheriffs,, § 868.) But, as explained, this is not a case where a sheriff seeks to falsify his return on an execution by evidence, but rather one where he has made a special return of facts, and by his evidence fully explains those facts; and this, as against the judgment creditor suing, we think he may do, either in action for money had and received, or for a false return. Lummis v. Kasson, 43 Barb. 373; Fuller v. Holden, 4 Mass. 498; Canada v. Southwick, supra; Shotwell v. Hamblin, 23 Miss. 157; Bank v. Benham, 23 Ala. 143; Evans v. Davis, 3 B. Mon. 344; Baker v. M'Duffie, 23 Wend. 289; Alderson on Judicial Writs, page 578; Freeman on Executions, § 366; Decker v. Armstrong, 87 Mo. 316.
In conclusion, we find appellant’s defense is well supported by reason and authority. The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with direction to enter a judgment for the defendant.
Reversed.
Pemberton, C. J., and Buck, J., concur.