Partlow v. Lawson

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of xhe Court.

On a single motion in the Circuit Court against a constable and his sureties, for a statutory judgment on account of his failure to return, within thirty days from the return day thereof, three several executions of ft. fa. for different debts, each less than $50, and.which had been issued in favor of the plaintiff in the motion, by a Justice of the Peace, and delivered to the said officer, there was an abatement as to some by a proper return of “not found,” and' a judgment against the others for the aggre. gate amount of the three executions at the date of the judgment, and thirty per cent damages thereon.

That judgment, being brought up for revision, must be reversed on three grounds:

1. As hitherto decided, more than once, by this Court, the amount due and collectable on an execution, when the officer’s statutory liability to damages for not returning it first accrues, and the per eentage thereon denounced as a penalty, constitute the utmost sum which can be recovered on motion: and a larger sum has been adjudged in this case.

2. The remedy for failing to return every execution is several and exclusive, and the consolidation of the three executions in one motion, could not give to the Circuit Court jurisdiction if otherwise that Court had no right to take cognizance of the case: Harris vs Smith, 7 Mon. 312.

The statute of 1835 (Ses. Acts j^ely repeals^! Senomeiag'penallies against constables for failing to return justíce^of the Peaceaionehave original junsdio tion in all such ¿ppealtothe Cir^“eTe^the^a“°imt exceeds Morehead <$• Reed for plaintiffs; Todd for defendants.

3. Prior to the enactment of the statute of 1835, (Sess. Acts, 302,) a constable-was liable on motion to only to Per cent damages for failing to return an execution with-7 , . , , , . . , m the prescribed period; but this latter act denounces a penalty of thirty per cent “recoverable before a Justice of the Peace,” with right to appeal to the Circuit Court whenever the amount of the execution exceeds five pounds. Ti/r , ivioreover, the time allowed lor returning an execution, by the act of 1835, is extended from twenty days (as fixed bv former enactments) to thirty days. It seems to us, J ' J J , therefore, that the act of 1835 constructively repealed all prior enactments as to the penalty, and that, as it gives jurisdiction only to Justices of the Peace to adjudge the penalty, the Circuit Court was not intended to exercise any concurrent jurisdiction in such a case and that, therefore, the original jurisdiction, in all such cases against constables, should now be deemed to be exclusively vested in Justices of the Peace.

The judgment of the Circuit Courtis, therefore, reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to dismiss the motion.