Spencer v. Long
Spencer v. Long
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court, Wallace, J., and Sprague, J., concurring;
The Sheriff having sold the horses and harness, after they had been duly claimed by the plaintiff, as exempt from execution, on the ground that he was entitled to such exemp
The sale of the buggy was also wrongful, because, previous to the sale, the proceedings before the Justice of the Peace had. been removed to the County Court by certiorari, by which the Justice of the Peace was commanded to stay all proceedings in said cause; and the Justice had notified the Sheriff that such writ of certiorari had been issued, and commanded him to stay all proceedings upon the execution. The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to recover the value of the buggy.
The statement on the motion for a new trial was not properly prepared, The grounds of the motion are not . contained in the statement. There was annexed to the statement an unsigned paper, containing the grounds of the motion, hut it constitutes no part of the statement, and the defendant was not entitled to be heard upon such a specification of the grounds of the motion. The grounds are indispensable to the statement. They constitute its basis, and if they are wanting, the statement should be disregarded.
Order granting a new trial reversed, and cause remanded.
Crockett, J., and Temple, J., expressed no opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- EPHRAIM V. SPENCER v. THOMAS N. LONG
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Liability of Sheriff.—Sale of Property Exempt from Execution.—A Sheriff who levies upon and sells property exempt from execution is liable for the value vf such property, if claimed as exempt prior to the sale. Idem.—Sale of Property Pending Order to Stay Proceedings.—A Sheriff who sells property on an execution issued by a Justice of the Peace, after the Justice has notified him that a writ of certiorari has been issued, and .commanded him to stay all proceedings upon tho execution, is liable for the value of the property. Practice.-^Grounds of Motion for a New Trial.—A paper containing tho grounds of a motion for a new trial, if unsigned, constitutes no part of the statement. Idem.—The grounds of a motion for a new trial aro indispensable to the statement. They constitute its basis, and if they arc wanting, the statement should be disregarded.