Gates v. People

Pillsbury, P. J.

It is insisted by counsel for appellees, that .goods taken in execution are in custodia legis, and not subject to distraint, and any one interfering with them renders himself subject to the summary proceeding had in this case; and several cases are referred to as sustaining this position. The cases referred to are where a court of equity, in the exercise of its extraordinary jurisdiction, by a judicial order appoints some person as a receiver to take possession of the property involved in the litigation for the purpose of its preservation, until it can be determined in due course of the proceedings who is equitably entitled to the property. The officer thus appointed by the court, and subject to its control in all things relating to the fund or other property placed in his charge by an order authorizing him to take the property preliminary to the final action of the court disposing of it, is necessarily entitled to the protection of the court when his right to retain the property is assailed by any one claiming in opposition to him. Any attempt to take the property from his possession, directly questions the action of the court in the premises, which cannot be allowed to be done in any such collateral manner.

The rule therefore obtains in such cases that any unauthorized interference with the possession of the officer holding property pendente Utc under order of the court, will be treated as a contempt of court.

Of like character are cases arising under the bankrupt law; there the assignee takes the property of the bankrupt, and under the supervision of the court retains possession of it, to await a final order of distribution, or disposes of it, holding the proceeds for like purpose, the property itself being at all times under the immediate control of the court.

The like doctrine has been announced where property has been seized upon mesne process, as in Knott v. The People, 83 Ill. 532, and People v. Neill, 74 Ill. 68, where it was held that a defendant in replevin was guilty of a contempt of court in rescuing the property from the replevisor after it had been delivered to him under the writ, and was properly so held.

A plaintiff in replevin, by filing the affidavit and bond required by the statute, entitles himself to the possession of the property during the pendency of the suit, and the court is called upon to determine who is the owner of the property, or entitled to its possession, and upon final determination to award its return to the defendant, or adjudge that the plaintiff retain it.

All these cases which hold that the court will interpose in preventing any unauthorized interference with property taken under its orders by summary proceedings for contempt, appear to rest upon the principle that the court is called upon in exercising its jurisdiction concerning the subject-matter of the pending litigation, to make some final adjudication determining the status .of the property thus placed in its custody under the law, or to make some final disposition of it in accordance with the rights of the parties and the character of the proceedings affecting it. We are unable to find that the rule for the protection of the court’s officers by this summary proceeding, has ever been extended to a sheriff taking goods in execution; at least we have been referred to no case thus holding, and it is believed none can be found. Admitting that goods taken in execution are in the custody of the law, to the extent that they cannot be taken on another writ in the hands of another officer, or distrained by the landlord for rent, it does not follow therefrom that they are in custody of the court through its officer appointed for the purpose of seizing them, or that the court is required to interpose summarily its strong arm to prevent a rescue by one claiming an interest therein adverse to the officer.

An officer levying an execution upon goods is required to reduce the same to his possession, at least so far as the character of the property will permit, and as the law does not recognize that the possession can be in two different officers at the same time, claiming by different writs, the policy of the law forbids that a subsequent writ shall confer authority upon the officer holding it, to deprive one holding the property by a prior lien of the right of prior satisfaction.

Upon a valid levy of an execution upon the personal property of a defendant, the law invests the sheriff with a special property therein, and gives him all the legal remedies necessary to protect his possession under the writ, and to recover damages for any invasion of his rights thereunder. He is made responsible for the proper care of the goods levied upon, to the end that they shall be made available under his writ; if therefore the property is taken from him or his custodian, he has by law the action of trespass, trover, or replevin against the wrong-doer. Garner v. Willis, Breese, 368; and if rescued he can call out the power of the county, if necessary, for the purpose of re-capture. Freeman on Ex. § 270, and authorities cited, People v. Church, 2 Wend. 262.

This last case is directly in point, and the conclusion of the court was that an attachment for contempt will issue for a rescue on mesne, but not on final process.

Especially should this rule be sustained where, as in the case at bar, appellant claimed, and with some show of reason, that the sheriff never perfected his levy under the execution by taking such possession of the goods as the law required, to prevent the landlord from distraining the goods of his tenant found upon the premises, and that the confession of judgment was fraudulent and void as to creditors, and he therefore had a right to take the goods upon his distress warrant.

If either of these facts existed, he had a right to levy his distress warrant, and thus obtain satisfaction for rent admitted to be due.

At all events, we are of the opinion that he cannot, by this summary method, be deprived of the right to have such questions submitted to a jury. The sheriff should have been left in this case to the remedies that the law affords Him for his own protection. The judgment of the court below will be reversed.

Judgment reversed.