Vertrees v. Shean
Vertrees v. Shean
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
This was an action brought by Vertrees against Shean & Ditto for the recovery of fifty acres of land in Hardin county.
The appellees held possession under Alfred G. Ditto, from whom appellant claimed to have derived title by purchase under an execution sale.
The circuit court — being of opinion that the execution which issued upon the replevin bond was unauthorized and void, and that the sheriff’s sale thereunder conferred no title — instructed the jury to find for the defendants; and a verdict and judgment having been rendered in conformity with this instruction, against the plaintiff, he has appealed.
The only question to be considered relates to the character and effect of the replevin bond, and the validity of the execution which issued thereon..
It is conceded that the bond is a valid common law bond, and enforcible against the obligors; but it is contended that it is not good as a replevin bond upon which an execution could issue, because it does not conform to the law, but is payable ’at six, instead of three months. On the other side, it is said that, although the bond does not conform to the statute in the particular mentioned, the fact that it was taken and treated by the parties as a replevin bond, and so regarded by the clerk and sheriff, and was never objected to or questioned by motion ox-otherwise, rendex-s it valid as a replevin bond between the pai-ties, and authorized the issual of the executioix.
It seems to us that the validity of the sale and execution under which it was made, must depend, not upon the effect to be given to the implied assent or acquiescence of the parties, but solely upon the authority of the clerk to issue an execution upon the bond in question.
By the execution law in force when the bond was taken and the execution issued, and which must govex-n this case, a
It is only by authority of law that bonds of any description have the force and effect of judgments; and without such authority no officer of the law has the right to treat any bond as a judgment, either for the issual of an execution dr for any other purpose. The law communicates the force of a judgment to a bond taken in pursuance of its requisitions; and in determining its efficacy we must look to the bond itself.
“ If it contains the characteristic stipulations of a replevin bond, and be payable at the time prescribed by law for such bond — though in taking it the officer may have erred in calculating the amount due, or may have acted erroneously in other respects — still it is a replevin bond, and until quashed or set aside, must have the force of a judgment.” (7 Mon., 261.) But if it is not payable at the time prescribed, or is wanting in any other material stipulation demanded by the law, it is not entitled to the force and effect of a judgment, and any process or execution issued thereon must be regarded as unauthorized and invalid. Neither the consent of the parties, nor the acts of officers, can impart to such bond the validity and effect of a judgment for any purpose.
The cases referred to by the counsel do not apply here. The bonds in those cases were taken in pursuance of a statute then in existence — though afterwards held to be unconstitutional— and it was upon that ground mainly that they were deemed sufficient to uphold the executions and sales.
Here, however, there is no semblance of authority for a replevin bond at six months, and it follows that the execution which issued thereon was of no effect, and conferred no power
It seems to us, therefore, that the instruction complained of was proper, and the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Vertrees v. Shean, &c.
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