Court Opinion

ID: 6504368
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:16:44.134335+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:26.354187
License: Public Domain

CHILTON, J.
This was a motion, made by the defendant in error against Andress, as sheriff of Monroe, for failing to pay over certain monies, which it was alleged he had collected on an execution, placed in his hands on the 23d January 1845, in favor of the defendant in error against one Neal Beard, for $6,810 41 — the sum collected amounting to the sum of three thousand six hundred and one dollars and fourteen cents.
As an answer to this motion, the defendant pleaded that the Branch of the Bank of the State of Alabama at Mobile, on the 5th day of June 1844, recovered a judgment in the County Court of Mobile against the said Neal Beard for the sum of forty-five hundred and eighty-five dollars and seventy-five cents, besides costs; that execution issued upon said judgment against said Beard and one Abraham Godbold, on the 15th day of July 1844, and was received by one Jacob S. Marsh, agent for said Bank, who returned the same “ no property found ;” that on the 28th day of Feb. 1S45, a second execution issued on said judgment against said Neal Beard alone, which was received by said defendant, William F. Andress, as sheriff of Monroe county, on the 3d March 1845, and the same was levied by the said Andress, on the 7th day of March 1845, on certain lands and slaves mentioned in the levy endorsed on said execution, all which were sold hy the defendant on the 7th day of May 1845, for the sum of $6,951; and that at the June Term 1845, the said Branch Bank moved the County Court of Mobile to amend the execution, which had previously issued against Beard and Godbold, so as to make it conform to the judgment, which motion was granted and the same was amended; and the defendant avered that as the said Branch Bank obtained the first judgment against said Neal Beard and issued the first execution, which was received by the proper officer before any execution was issued on the judgment of said Edmund W. Roberts, in his rule mentioned, and has regularly issued its executions on the judgment in its favor since the rendition of the same, by which its lien has been preserved, it is entitled to have its said judgment first paid out of the proceeds of the property sold by the said defendant, Andress, sheriff as aforesaid, on the said 7th May 1S45; and so he, the said plaintiff Roberts, *389ought not to have judgment against him on the motion. To this plea there was a general demurrer, which was sustained by the court, and judgment was rendered against the sheriff for the snm of $3,601 14, to reverse which this writ of error was sued out.
1. We deem it unnecessary to say more, in respect to the amendment of the former execution which issued, as well against Godbold as Beard, than that the Court possessed the power to make it, and its lien, if any attached under it, was not in any degree affected by the amendment, which consisted merely in striking out the name of Go-'Sbold, that had been improperly inserted.
2. The main question is, did the delivery to the bank agent of such previous Ji. fa. confer a lien, so as to give to an alias execution in favor of said Bar.k priority of satisfaction over an execution in favor of Roberts, which came first into the sheriff’s hands? If the delivery of the execution to the bank agent created a lien, then it is clear that if there has been no chasm in the issuance of execution since, the lien is preserved and transfered to the last execution, which would entitle the Bank, and not Roberts, to the money in question.
The lien, as dependent upon a delivery to the bank agent, is assailed upon two grounds — 1st. It is said the statute gives the lien, from the time the execution goes into the hands of the sheriff of the county in which the personal property then is, and does not give this effect to a delivery of such execution to a bank agent. — Clay’s Dig. 208-9, §§ 41, 42. The statute reads, that “ No writ of fieri facias, or other writ of execution, shall bind the property of the goods, against which such writ is sued forth, but from the time that such writ shall be delivered to the sheriff, under-sheriff, coroner, or other officer, to be executed ; and for the better manifestation of the said time, such sheriff, coroner, or other officer, his deputy or agent, shall, upon the receipt of any such writ, without any fee thorefor, endorse upon the back thereof the day of the month and year he received the same; and if two or more writs against the same person shall be delivered on the same day, that which is first delivered shall be first satisfied.” This act was passed in 1807.
By the 4th section of the act of 1843, (Clay’s Dig. 118, § 86,) the Bank^of the State of Alabama and its several branches were *390each authorised to appoint an agent, “ who shall have the power to serve notices, subpoenas, attachments, executions, and other process, and have the same powers, and shall be entitled .to the same fees, and shall observe the same regulations, as the existing laws prescribe to sheriffs, and said banks shall require of said officers a bond in the penalty of not less than ten thousand dollars, faithfully to perform all the duties of their office,” &c.
What object had the Legislature in view in authorising the banks to appoint such officers, confering upon them the same powers, the same fees, and subjecting them to the same regulations, which the existing laws prescribe to sheriffs ? In my opinion, the answer is, that whereas the banks were frequently subjected to much inconvenience, and sometimes to loss, from having executions in the hands of the various sheriffs of the State, this could be remedied by the appointment by them of an agent, who might take charge of the whole business of the banks, and who, having no other process than such as belonged to the banks in his hands, could give it that attention which it required. It was a remedial statute, designed to facilitate the collection of the demands due the State Bank and branches, and not to take away any of the' incidents, which attached to process in favor of these banks, when placed in the hands of the respective sheriffs. If the execution in the hands of the bank agent is shorn of its lien, then the act would seem to be an ingenious artifice to postpone the debts due to the banks, which it was contemplated should be collected by its agent, to executions, &c. in the hands of sheriffs.. But we are not at liberty so to treat it, and such could never have been the intention of the framers of the act. Why are these agents required to endorse on the back of the executions, which go into their hands, the day of the month and the year when received by them? The act then in existence, prescribing this as one of the regulations to be observed by sheriffs, gives the answer. The execution, being a lien upon the goods from the time the same goes into the hands of the sheriff, coroner, under-sheriff, or other officer, “for the better manifestation of the said time,” he shall, upon the receipt, of any such writ, endorse, &c.; and if he fail so to endorse the writ, he is liable to a penalty, not exceeding fifteen per centum on the amount of the execution, &c. — Clay’s Dig. 209, % 41. I do not hesitate to pronounce that it was the intention of the *391Legislature to attach the same lien to executions in the hands of agents, as would have attached had they been delivered to sheriffs; and if the intention be clear, I care not for the letter.— Bac. Abr. Stat. I, § 8.
3.' But it is argued that if the Legislature designed to make the agent a sheriff pro hac vice, the act would be unconstitutional, as it would take from the sheriff, who is required by our constitution to be elected by the people, a portion of his appropriate duties and devolve the same upon an agent appointed by a corporation. The 24th section of the 4th article of the constitution declares that “a sheriff shall be elected in each county by the qualified electors thereof, who shall hold his office for the term of three years, unless sooner removed.” We cannot perceive how authorising the Bank to appoint a general aigent, for the transacting of its own business in the State, should conflict with this provision. This agent is a totally different officer, whose acts, so far as the business of the Bank is concerned, the Legislature has said shall be valid, as if done by the sheriff, and he shall be subject to the same regulations in respect to the busisiness of the Bank, as sheriffs. It would not be competent for the Legislature to create an officer with the powers and duties of sheriff in the county, to be elected otherwise than by the qualified electors. The case would then fall within the principle of The People v. Warner, 7 Hill R. 81. It was certainly never contemplated that the Legislature should be denied the power to authorise persons, other than sheriffs, to'exercise some particular duty, which may hitherto have been devolved by law upon those officers. They cannot abolish his office — they cannot, by the appointment of another officer in a different mode, devolve upon him the duties of sheriff to the exclusion of that officer, thus leaving him a sinecure; but they may say an attorney may serve a notice, which before, the law required to be executed by the sheriff — they may invest a corporation with the power of appointing an agent for the purpose of transacting its own business, although that business may formerly have been done by sheriffs, and that is the case before us. It may be observed, that the appointment of such agents, and the exercise by. them of the prescribed duties, were but cumulative means afforded the banks for the collection of their demands, (which were really due the State, the assets belonging to the State,) and the banks *392could have put their process, notwithstanding, in the sheriff’s, or coroner’s hands, as the case might require. We agree upon the constitutional question.
But an argument from inconvenience is attempted to be deduced, against giving process of execution in the hands of bank agents a lien ; for it is said if a lien attaches, it is co-extensive with the State. This may have been, and probably was a good argument for the repeal of the statute, but we think it furnishes no just rule of construction, unless in a doubtful case. That persons could not tell when they might safely buy property, because of a lien, might be an argument against all liens. If it is replied, they could call on the sheriff and ascertain what executions are in his hands, even then thej may often be misled, for although he may have, none when enquiry is made, yet he may hare had one months before, which, when renewed and sent to him, preserves the lien and defeats the sale. The same reply may be made to the argument in regard to the injustice which may sometimes result from such liens, depriving the diligent creditor of the fruits of his diligence, in hunting up property, which is to be taken away from him by older executions. This not unfrequently occurs under executions in the sheriff’s hands. In respect to lands, judgments constitute liens co-extensive with the State, and the greatest injustice and hardship are sometimes done to purchasers; as, for example, in the case of the Bank v. Curry, 13 Ala. 304. In that case, Curry bought of Riddle a tract of land at $13,500, without any notice of a lien, and at a time when his vendor was solvent; he made many valuable improvements, costing $1,200; eight years thereafter an execution issued on a judgment, which had slumbered all this time in the Montgomery Circuit Court, and was levied on the land as the property of his vendor, and that too when the vendor had become hopelessly insolvent — Held that the land was liable by virtue of the lien — that it was the duty of the purchaser to beware — to examine, if need be, the dockets and records of every District, Chancery, Circuit, County and Orphans’ Court in the State for ten years back, to ascertain if there was no judgment which bound the land — a much more onerous duty than making inquiry of some five bank agents, as to executions which have lately come to their hands. Besides, there is certainly as much reason for deducing this lien from *393the statutes quoted, as there can be found in our law for the Hen of judgments on real estate. So that the fact that hardship may result from the extension of the lien, is, in my judgment, of no weight. The law must lay down fixed and general rules, and these rules cannot yield to the exigencies and hardships of each particular case. We, however, see nothing so unreasonable in extending the lien in favor of the State, and to this extent giving an advantage to the State Bank and Branches in the collection of debts. These advantages are confered on them in giving summary remedies by motion, which were denied to the citizens generally, and we are not prepared to say that the extension of the lien was not in the contemplation of the Legislature in passing this statute. At least, it results from their action on the subject.
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.