Court Opinion

ID: 6275730
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 15:59:22.636411+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:01.249061
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Orlady, J.,
Charles A. Terry obtained a license to sell liquor in Sullivan county in 1900, and filed his bond required by the statute, with George E. Brown and J. G. Cobb as his sureties, which was approved by the court, one of its stipulations being as follows : — “ And further, we do, by these presents empower the district attorney of Sullivan county, Pa., .and any other attorney of any court of record in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania to appear for us therein and confess judgment against us for the said penal sum, with costs of suit, and release of all errors ; and we do hereby waive the right of inquisition on real estate, and all laws exempting real and personal property from levy and sale on execution.”
On September 26 of that year Terry was convicted of selling liquor to minors, etc.; was sentenced to pay a fine of $300 and costs, and to undergo imprisonment in the county jail for sixty days. On September 28 the district attorney caused a judgment to be entered on the bond, in favor of the commonwealth and against Terry and his two sureties ; the confession of judgment reciting the default of Terry, his subsequent conviction, and the resultant sentence. On this judgment a writ of fieri facias was issued on the prsecipe of the district attorney, whose name was regularly indorsed on the writ as the attorney for the plaintiff, and he personally delivered the writ to H. W. Osier, the sheriff of the county, who the next day made a levy on the personal property of Terry. On September 29 Terry appealed to this court from his conviction in the quarter sessions, which appeal, on October 2, was directed to “ operate as a supersedeas upon the defendant giving bail in the sum of $1,000, to be approved by one of the judges of the court below, on due notice to the district attorney.” Pursuant to this order, which was filed in the quarter sessions on October 3, 1900, a bond in proper form was filed in the quarter sessions, approved by the president judge thereof, and Terry was released'from custody. Subsequent to all this, the county solicitor, who was also the attorney of Terry, gave notice to the sheriff of the order made *143by this court, whereupon the sheriff made a return of his writ with the indorsement, viz.: “ This case being appealed to the Superior Court, I respectfully return this writ.” On November 2 a testatum fieri facias was received from Bradford county against Terry, by virtue of which the sheriff seized and sold certain personal property of the defendant, and applied all of the proceeds to that writ. The unsold personal property was eloigned and carried out of Sullivan county by Terry, who also left the county, of which facts a return was made on a vend. ex. issued on the original execution.
The conviction of Terry in the quarter sessions was affirmed by this court on January 22, 1901 (15 Pa. Superior Ct. 608). He then served out his term of imprisonment and was discharged under the insolvent laws without payment of the fine or costs. On December, 13, 1901, the county of Sullivan, by its solicitor, caused an execution to be issued on the judgment against Terry, Brown and Cobb, to collect the fine and costs imposed on Terry. A levy was made on the personal property of the sureties, who, after an ineffectual attempt to have the judgment opened, paid the debt, interest and costs thereof, and on July 1, 1902 the judgment was assigned to their use by the county. ' Brown and Cobb then brought this action in the name of the commonwealth to their use, upon the official recognizance of H. W. Osier, sheriff, against him and his sureties, which,, after three trials in the court below, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs.
Section 78 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 427, provides that “ all fines imposed upon any party by any court of criminal jurisdiction shall be decreed to be paid to the commonwealth ; but the same shall be collected and received for the. use of the respective counties in which such fines shall have been imposed as aforesaid as is now directed by law.” By the 10th section of the Act of March 81, 1856, P. L. 200, regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors, it is provided, “ Whenever a judgment for any forfeiture, or conviction had for any violation of the provisions of this act, or of any other law for the observance of which said bond shall be conditioned, it shall be the duty of the district attorney of the proper county to enter up judgment and institute suit thereon.” The Act of May 22, 1895, P. L. 101, defining the duties of a county solicitor, does *144not conflict with the special statutory duty of the district attorney under the prior statute, and we have not found any direct repeal of section 10 of the act of 1856. Had the solicitor for the county desired to raise the question, it should have been done in a proper manner at the time its decision was most important to the sheriff. In so advising that officer he acted as counsel for Terry, and his other client, the county, was not interested in having the writ stayed. The sheriff’s return shows that it was based on the fact that an appeal had been taken and not that the appeal was made to operate as a supersedeas. Moreover, the advice given was erroneous, as hereinafter shown. The form of the liquor license bond had the approval of the court which granted the license, and the entry of the judgment was in strict conformity with its terms; the attorney designated in it caused the execution to be issued thereon and he was the only attorney, so far as shown by the record, who had control of the writ then in the sheriff’s hands. The county solictor, as the record then stood, was a stranger to it. The order of supersedeas in the case of Commonwealth v. Terry, had no effect on the execution issued out of the court of common pleas. The order made in the criminal case would stay proceedings only on the judgment in that case. To affect the execution from the common pleas (an entirely different court and in which the order of this court making the appeal taken by Terry operate as a supersedeas was not filed) required an order made by the court from which the execution issued. The first fieri facias was in the hands of the sheriff six days before the order was made effective in the quarter sessions, and was merely an auxilliary process to supersede the enforcement of the judgment of the court of quarter sessions, which was brought up for review, and was not effective to stay any proceedings collateral to it, and, there being no order made in the common pleas concerning the fieri facias, that writ was unaffected by the supersedeas awarded in the criminal case. The sheriff was bound to look to his writ and follow its directions, and he or the county could have presented the matter to the court of common pleas for its order. This was not done, and the action of the sheriff in abandoning his levy and returning the writ was without warrant of law: 20 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. 1241, 1251, 1257; Ewing v. Thompson, 43 Pa. 372; Goddard v. Ord*145way,101 U. S. 745; 1 P. & L. Dig. of Dec. 843; Knox County v. Harshman, 132 U. S. 14 (10 Sup. Ct. Repr. 8).
The sureties on the license bond of Terry being compelled to pay the debt of their principal by reason of the neglect of the sheriff to collect it from the principal debtor, may maintain an action against that officer on his official bond. It is highly important for the sheriff’s protection and that of his sureties, as well as for the interest and security of the commonwealth and of suitors, that sheriffs should, in all cases, strictly comply with their duty: Commonwealth v. McCoy, 8 Watts, 153. The judgment on which the writ was founded clearly showed the relation of the defendants to each other, and to say that he owes no duty to his sureties would be the same as to say that he owes no duty to anyone. An action may be maintained on his official bond, immediately after he refuses to make a levy pointed out to him by the plaintiff in the writ, without waiting for the return day of the writ: Shannon v. Commonwealth, 8 S. & R. 444, and his sureties are bound to pay for the default of their principal: Ricketson v. Commonwealth, 51 Pa. 155. There are numerous cases showing that the liability of the sureties of the sheriff is direct, and suit may be brought whenever a breach occurs: Smith v. Commonwealth, 59 Pa. 320; Carmack v. Commonwealth, 5 Binney, 184; Karch v. Commonwealth, 3 Pa. 269. The return of the sheriff, in the case before us, was an improper one and his wrongful withdrawal from a levy on the only writ then in his hands, and embracing all the defendant’s goods “ is prima facie evidence that they were of value sufficient to pay the plaintiff’s debt: Beale v. Commonwealth, 7 Watts, 183.” His mistake or misconduct entitles these plaintiffs to recover for that injury from him or his sureties: Bank v. Potius, 10 Watts, 148; Wright v. Darlington Runk & Co., 108 Pa. 372. The 41st section of the Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 729, defines his duty, and if from any cause he is in doubt as to his duty, or counsel for plaintiff and the defendant do not agree in regard to his duty, he has recourse to the court from which the writ issued to require the use plaintiffs in the writ to appear and indemnif}^ him. However, he elected to be governed by the counsel of Terry, the defendant. Nor did the fact alone, that the county had a beneficial interest in the fund when ultimately secured, give the solicitor *146for the county control over the writ in opposition to the district attorney who issued it and whose name was indorsed on it as counsel for the plaintiff. It is clear that the sureties on Terry’s license bond were injured and aggrieved by the misconduct of the sheriff, and that, having made good his wrong, they are entitled to recover from him on his official recognizance and his sureties. See also Rowe v. Williams, 7 B. Monroe (Ky.) 202; Commonwealth v. Straton, 7 J. J. Marshall’s Reports (Ky.), 90.
The judgment is affirmed.