Court Opinion

ID: 6501910
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:14:42.339813+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:38.153742
License: Public Domain

ORMOND, J.
The bill appears to have been filed on the supposition that a mere levy on property, sufficient to satisfy the execution, was a satisfaction. The law is certainly otherwise. A seizure by the sheriff, on property sufficient to satisfy the debt, will be a satisfaction as it respects the defendant hi execution, though the sheriff maywastethe goods, and if it were conceded that the plaintiff, as surety, was entitled to avail himself of and defence which his principal could make, that is not the predicament of this case. Here the goods levied on were taken from the custody of the sheriff, by the execution of a delivery bond, any restored to the defendant in execution. It was therefore no satisfaction as it regards the defendant in execution. [See the case of-Campbell v. Spence, at the present term.] As therefore, the plaintiff in error was liable on the judgment, he incurred no additional responsibility by signing the delivery bond.
*57It is difficult to suppose that any one is so ignorant as to believe that he incurs no responsibility by becoming a party to a delivery bond; at all events every one must be held to a knowledge of the law, and cannot plead ignorance of it.
Besides, it is not charged that the Bank was at all privy to, or consenting to the representations of the sheriff, and cannot therefore be affected by them. The bill is totally destitute of the semblance of equity, and was properly dismissed by the Chancellor, but in awarding damages against the complainant, because it appeared to him that the injunction was obtained for delay merely, the Chancellor erred.
The statute is to the following effect: “whenever an injunction shall be dissolved, damages after the rate of six per centum shall be added to the amount of the judgment; provided the court be of opinion that the injunction was obtained for delay.” [Aik. Dig. 291.] It is true, that every dismissal of a bill includes a dissolution of the injunction, but we do not think it follows that because a bill has no equity, it was necessarily intended for delay. It may have been filed in good faith, under the advice of counsel, sanctioned by the opinion of the Judge granting the injunction, and in such a case, could not be said to be filed for delay. In our opinion such a conlucsion cannot be drawn, but in a case where the facts upon which the bill is filed, and the injunction obtained, are shown by the answer to be untrue or evasive.
The Chancellor divided the costs between the complainant and the sheriff. If this is an error, it is one in favor of the plaintiff in error, and cannot, therefore, be the subject of complaint by him.
The decree of the Chancellor must be so far modified as to dismiss the bill without damages. Let the costs of this court be taxed against the Bank.