Wood v. Sayre
Wood v. Sayre
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Couit.
This is a judgment rendered by the county court, in favor of the paymaster of a regiment, against the sheriff and his sureties, for failing to account for the fines put into his hands for collection, by the colonel of the regiment.
The court rendered judgment for the amount of the fines, with fifteen per cent damages, and five per cent interest thereon. This interest and damages it is insisted, is erroneous; and other errors are assigned.
The act of Assembly, or that section thereof, which regulates the motion, reads thus:
“But in case the said sheriff shall fail, or refuse to pay, and settle with the paymaster as aforesaid, the paymaster shall immediately proceed to recover the monies due from the said sheriff., and his deputies, or either of them, by motion in the county court, in the same manner, that moneys are recovered by the counties, against their public collectors of levy.”
It will be needless to refer to the acts regulating the recovery of levies from the sheriff, or public collectors, to ascertain whether the fifteen per cent damages, and five per cent interest, are recoverable, because this act fixes the amount to be recovered, by the words the “moneys due” with out saying any thing of damages or interest, and not leaving grounds for inference, that interest and damages ivere to be added. It cannot be inferred from the expressions “the same manner that moneys are recovered by counties.” For it will be seen that in these latter recoveries, damages and interest are not annexed.
But as the judgment is to be disturbed on this account, another question is to be considered, not named in argument; and that is, the propriety of bring-'
The first statute on this subject which we shall notice, as one to which we are referred, is in 2d Dig. L. K. 856, and reads thus:
“And it shall and may be lawful, where such.sheriff or collector fails to account with the county aforesaid, for the court of that county before whom he ought to account, to enter judgment against such delinquent sheriff or collector, for whatever shall appear to be due from such sheriff or collector, and award execution thereon, giving such sheriff or collector ten days previous notice of such proceeding.”
Here we find that not only the damages are omitted, as before suggested, but the sheriff or collector alone is named, against whom the motion is to be brought, and nothing is said of the sureties; and it evidently follows, that the remedy by motion does not lie by this act.
But there is another act on this subject, omitted in the digest of the statutes, probably because it was supposed to be entirely superseded by the act last recited. But as this act, from which this provision is cited, contains no repealing clause, and there being some little variance between them, especially with regard to sureties, we must take the latter into consideration. It will be found in the 1st vol. Litt. L. K. 202, and is to this effect:
“They, (to-wit: the justices of the county courts) shall have power to call on the present and former*665 'sheriffs or collectors, for a settlement of their accounts, and may appoint two of their own body to settle with such sheriff or collector, arid make a report of such settlement to the court; and if, on stick settlement with any sheriff or collector, they may be in arrears to the county, the court shall give judgment and award execution for the sum that may appear due from such sheriff or collector, or against their securities, executors, administrators or legal representatives. Provided such sheriff or collector, his or their securities, executors, administrators or legal representative, have ten days previous notice of such motion.”
Both these acts must be taken as acts in pari mate-via, as relating to the same subject, and operating on the same legal proceedings. The first in the order of time, is the last which we have recited. The subsequent act omitted saying any thing about the sureties of the sheriff or collector; but it did not expressly repeal the former act, nor is there any provision in it incompatible with the first act; the first must consequently be considered in construing the latter act, and the effect will be, to insert in the Jailer act the provisions of the former touching sure- ' lies.
But after this addition is made to the latter act, we are still unable to sustain this notice. For it is •against the sheriff and his sureties both, and the act which subjects the sureties as well as the sheriff, authorizes a several proceeding, either against the shier•iff or his sureties, hut not against both. The authority is to move against the‘"-sheriff or collector, or against their securities,” not “and their securities.” We would readily conclude that the legislature in■tended both to be included in one proceeding, as more safe to the rights of the parties, if there was any thing in the act which would tolerate the construction. The disjunctive “or,” is used in other parts of the same sentence in its usual sense, implying severalty: that is, one or the other, but not both at once, and we cannot place any other sense thereon.
Tí therefore follows, that without this act, this : proceeding against the sureties at all, is wrong, and jjj-g ac^ a j0jnt proceeding cannot be indulged. The judgment must consequently be reversed, with •costs, and the cause be remanded, with directions to ■«quash the notice, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.