State ex rel. Hazlerigg v. Early

Woods, J.

Complaint against a sheriff and his bondsmen, charging in substance, that the sheriff, by virtue of a decree of foreclosure, had sold certain real estate of the relatrix, and after satisfying the decree and costs, had remaining in his hands of the proceeds of the sale a surplus, which, on demand, he had failed and refused to pay over to the relatrix.

The defendants joined in an answer of three paragraphs, to the first and third of Avhich the plaintiff demurred. The court sustained the demurrer to the third paragraph, and overruled that to the first, to which the plaintiff excepted whereupon, according to the recital of the record, “ the plaintiff failing and declining to reply, judgment ” was “ awarded the defendants on the first paragraph of the answer.”

The second paragraph of answer, which is a j>lea of pay*541ment, seems to have been overlooked or ignored; and counsel for the appellant now insists that that plea is not good, .and that, if otherwise good, it was irrelevant and should be disregarded by this court, as it was by the court below.

It is not necessary that a plea of payment allege to whom payment was made. Demuth v. Daggy, 26 Ind. 341.

And we perceive no force in the other suggestion of counsel that the relation of debtor and creditor did not exist between the sheriff and the relatrix in respect to the money .sued for, and hence that the plea of payment is irrelevant .and inapplicable. When an officer or private individual, who has become accountable to another for money, is sued for not accounting for, or for failing to pay or turn over, the money to the one entitled thereto, the plea of payment is necessarily pertinent, and, if interposed, should not be disregarded. Upon this plea, therefore, irrespective of the first, upon the failure and refusal of the plaintiff to reply to it, the defendants were entitled to judgment.

We are of opinion, moreover, that the first paragraph of the answer, on which the court based its judgment, is also good.' It shows that the sheriff turned over the surplus in question to the clerk of the court for the use of the relators, and “ that the attorneys of record of said Catharine Hazlerigg and of and for both said Catharine and William Hazlerigg, thereunto duly authorized, collected and received from the clerk •of said court for the relators and for said Catharine, of said moneys, as follows: William K. Marshall and Jason B. Brown received each the sum of $130.50, and William W. Herod received $130.50, and the remainder, to wit, $35.80, was retained by consent of the relators and applied by said clerk on ■costs in said court, for which said Catharine and her property were liable.”

We do not agree with counsel that the phrase, “thereunto •duly authorized,” imports no other authority than that which came from the said attorneys having been the attorneys of record of the relators in the foreclosure suit. We think it a *542plain and direct averment that the individuals named, who are described as attorneys of record, had authority from the relators to receive from the clerk the sums by them respectively receipted for. But if there were any doubt of this, the fact alleged that the remaining sum of $35.80 was applied,, with their approval, to the use of the relators, would seem to put the sufficiency of the plea beyond question, as it shows a ratification of the act of the sheriff in paying the money to the clerk. Without their consent, the sheriff clearly had no-right to pay the money to the clerk, but was bound to pay it to the relatrix, from whose property it was derived. Code,, section 479, R. S. 1881, section 762. But the relators, on learning that such disposition had been made of the money, could not ratify in part and reject in part. Their alleged appropriation, therefore, of the $35.80 was a ratification of the transfer of the whole sum by the sheriff to the clerk, if not of the payment of portions thereof by the clerk to the said attorneys, if, when made, those payments were in fact unauthorized.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.