Ex parte Oehmig & Weihl
Ex parte Oehmig & Weihl
Opinion of the Court
This proceeding is an application for a mandamus to the Chancellor of the North-western Chancery Division, requiring him to hear and determine a claim inteposed to personal property levied on by execution issued on a
The statutes in force prior to the time the present Code went into effect, regulating the return of the execution, affidavit and bond, when the property levied on is claimed by a person not a party to the execution, comprised sections 705 and 3342 of the Code of 1876. If the execution issued from the Probate Court, section 705 provided: “The sheriff must return the original execution to the judge of probate issuing the same, with his return thereon of the interposition of a claim. He must, also, return a copy of the execution, with the returns thereon, the affidavit and bond, to the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court of his own county, where the trial of the right of property is to be had.” When the execution issued from any court other than the Probate, section 3342 provided: “The sheriff must return the affidavit and bond to the next term of the court from which the execution issued, when an issue must be made between the plaintiff in execution and the claimant, in which the former must be required to allege that the property levied on is the property of the defendant in execution, and liable to its satisfaction.” Under these statutes, the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction to try the right of property, unless the execution issued from the Probate or Circuit Court; when the execution issued from the Chancery Court, that court had exclusive jurisdiction of the claim suit.
Section 705 was changed by the codifiers, and incorporated in the Code of 1886 as section 3006, so as to require the sheriff, when execution issued from the Probate or Chancery Court, to return a copy thereof, and of the returns thereon, the affidavit and bond, to the next term of the Circuit Court, or court of like jurisdiction of his county, where the trial of the right of property must be had. Section 3006, however, did not become the law, so far as it applies when the execution issued from the Chancery Court, until December 25th, 1887, when the Code of 1886 went into effect. ' At the time the
The writ of mandamus will be awarded and issued, unless the Chancellor, upon being advised of our conclusion, proceeds to hear and determine the claim suit.
Reference
- Status
- Published