Sanders v. Bank of Kentucky

CHIEF JUSTICE SIMPSON

delivered the opinion oe the court:

This was a motion in the name of the Bank of Kentucky against a sheriff and his sureties for failing to return an execution for thirty days after the return day thereof.

Subsequent to the time of the alleged delinquency of the .sheriff, one of the defendants in the execution, who stood in the relation of surety to the other defendants therein, paid to the bank the full amount of the execution.

Whether the surety, by thus paying the execution, acquired a right to prosecute this motion against the sheriff, is the first question that arises in the case; for if he acquired such a right, he was the party beneficially interested, and should have been one of the plaintiffs in the motion.

The statute confers on a surety who pays a judgment a right to an assignment thereof from the plaintiff, with the power to sue out an execution, or otherwise control the judgment for his own benefit, so far as to enable him to obtain satisfaction from the principal for the whole amount paid by him as surety. And he is also, under the statute, entitled to the benefit of any lien existing under or by virtue of the judgment which he has discharged. It may be regarded as very doubtful whether, under these provisions of the statute, he is invested with the right of the plaintiff in the execution to maintain a motion against the sheriff for official delinquency. But even if he be, he has no right to the thirty per cent, damages which the law imposes upon the sheriff for failing to return an execution within the time prescribed by law. The statute vests him with a right to be reimbursed the amount which he has paid, but nothing more. He has a right to make that amount out of the principal debtor, and is entitled to the benefit of any lien which existed under the judgment at the time it was paid. The liability of the sheriff to the plaintiff in the execution, for the payment of the thirty per cent, damages, cannot be regarded as a lien to secure the payment of the judgment, even if, by the most liberal construction, hjs liability for the amount of *329the execution can be so regarded. It follows, therefore, that the surety, not being equitably entitled to the damages, was' not a necessary party to the motion, inasmuch as the judgment rendered was for thte. damages alone.

It is contended thii.t the payment to the plaintiffs of the amount of the execution extinguished their right to maintain this motion against the sheriff and his sureties. The payment of the amount of the execution would not, however, have had that effect, even if madeby the sheriff himself. He was liable for the amount of the execution and thirty per cent, damages thereon. A payment of jart of that liability would not have discharged the residue theftof. The payment which one of the defendants in the executionmade, cannot have a greater effect than a payment made by th sheriff himself would have had. As, however, the plaintiffs vere paid the amount of the execution by one of the defend,nts therein, the liability of the sheriff to them was thereby extinguished to that extent; because, if he had paid the amount of the execution himself, he would have been equitably°ntitled to it, and have had a right to look to all the defendías in the execution for reimbursement, unless he had lost tit right against some of them by his official misconduct.

As the plaintiffs had a right, noyithstanding they had been paid the amount of the execution, prosecute a motion for the recovery of the damages, they did 0t lose that right by permitting the motion to be carried onxpressly for the benefit of the surety, by whom the amount otfie execution had been paid. They might have dismissed tl motion; but instead of doing so, they authorized it to be predated; and a judgment having been recovered by them, they iye a right to allow the surety to have the benefit of it. The, ermission which they gave him to prosecute the motion for own benefit being merely gratuitous, did not invest him any leg-al or equitable interest in the recovery, and the atorjty thus conferred might have been revoked at any time. plaintiffs in the motion did not, therefore, invest the suret^qth such a beneficial interest in the subject of the controvy as required him to be a party to the motion.

*330None of the matters of defense relied upon were sufficient to defeat the plaintiffs’ right to the damages. The action which had been brought against the sheriff and his sureties, prior to the commencement of the motion, was for official delinquency in failing to collect the exertion when it was in his hands, and for making thereon a false return. The cause of action in that case was entirely different from that upon which this motion was founded, and the pendency of that action was no bar to the. prosecution of this motion.

No plausible excuse even, much bss a reasonable one, was shown for the failure to return the.execution until more than thirty days after the return day thereof. The sheriff and his sureties were therefore liable for pe thirty per cent, damages imposed by the statute in such c¡ses; and as the court below rendered a judgment against then only for the amount of the damages, and not for the amount of the execution, the judgment does not exceed the amoun for which the appellants were liable, and they cannot justly omplain of it.

The judgment, however, igassailed by the appellees, who contend that they had a rig# to recover the amount of the execution, as well as the darpges for the failure to return it.

From what has been ah-ady said, it is apparent that the plaintiffs in the execution, living been paid the amount thereof by one of the defendants tfein, had no right to hold the sheriff responsible therefor, but c^Id onty claim from him the damages for which he had render/ himself liable by his official delinquency.

But it appears that I3 surety who paid the execution was joined as a co-plaintiff /the motion, and his name was stricken out by order of the c/rt- It is therefore contended that he should have been per/tted to have joined as one of the plaintiffs in the prosecut» of the motion, and that a judgment should have been rflered in his favor for the amount of the execution.

As has been alr^y sai(l, it is very questionable whether the surety, inasmuch I*e was himself one of the defendants in the execution, cofi avail himself of the liability of the sheriff for the amount p’cof to the plaintiffs in the execution j but if *331lie could, such a joint proceeding as is contended for would have been wholly irregular and unauthorized.

The plaintiffs in the execution were alone entitled to recover a judgment for the damages. If the surety had a right to recover a judgment for the amount of the execution, then it would have been a proceeding carried on by two plaintiffs, founded on two separate causes of action, in which two judgments would have been required, and neither of the plaintiffs would have had any interest in the judgment which was recovered by the other. If, therefore, the surety had a right to institute a motion against the sheriff and his sureties for the amount of the execution, the motion was improperly joined with the other, and the court below very properly directed his name to be stricken out as one of the plaintiffs in the motion.

Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed on both the original and cross appeal.