Dixon v. Caskey
Dixon v. Caskey
Opinion of the Court
No notice of the intended motion against the sheriff was served on his securities, nor did they become parties to the issue submitted to the jury, which was made up between the plaintiff and the sheriff alone. Therefore, if it be admitted that the plaintiff could move the court for judgment against the securities and the sheriff jointly, upon the verdict against the sheriff alone, still it is very clear that he must introduce the proper proof that they, whom he seeks to charge as the securities of the sheriff, are in fact such, and if he fails to make such proof, he is entitled to judgment against the sheriff alone. — Spence v. Rutlege et al. 11 Ala. 557; Reed v. The Plant. & Merch. Bank, 3 ib. 712; Garey v. Trost et al. 5 ib. 636. As it is incumbent on the plaintiff, when the securities are not made parties to the motion, to prove their suretyship to entitle himself to a judgment against them, it follows that they may contest that fact in any proper manner, and introduce proof to show that in fact they are not the sheriff’s securities; otherwise they would be bound by a proceeding to which they were -not parties.
The whole question, therefore, is, whether these defendants, whom the plaintiff sought to charge as securities, were such at the time the supposed default was committed ? ■ We are clearly of the opinion that they were not. True they were his securities at the time the execution was placed in the sheriff’s hands; but before the return day thereof one of the securities had applied to the county judge to be discharged from the bond; the judge had issued a citation to the sheriff in the manner directed by the act to giv'e a new bond with sureties; the sheriff had
We can see no error in the record prejudicial to the plaintiff, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- DIXON, use, &c. v. CASKEY, Sh'ffs.
- Status
- Published