Peet v. Morgan
Peet v. Morgan
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the . court. 1 his case has been already before the , and by aiudgment of this tribunal of J J & March term, 1827, it was remanded for a new trial Since its return to the district court the intervener discontinued by leave of the court, » • the case was tried between the original par-ties»there was judgment against the defendant and he appealed.
It is an action against the appellant for having as sheriff, illegally and forcibly taken pos* . . . . oí a certain quantity of merchandize, * of which the plaintiffs allege they are o wners*
The defendant pleads that the trespass _and injury | con.plained of, results from a seizure made by him in his official capacity in virtue of a writ of attachment issued in a suit
He further pleads that the goods were the property of the Dewitts, and that the sale to the plaintiff, if any such there was, was false, fraudulent, simulated, and collusive.
This last ground of defence was disposed of when the case was last before us. We there held, as we had repeatedly decided in other cases quite similar to this, that frauds and collusion could not be enquired into in an action arising on a seizure made by the sheriff that if the sale was fraudulent,- a suit should be brought to set it aside, and that the party could not before a judgment was rendered, annulling the contract, treat the transaction as null and void,and seize the property as belonging to the vendors.
We then also expressed our opinion, if not at great length, at least after much reflection, that the first ground of defence was untenable. The eounsel for the appellant has again gone frilly into the subject, but after the best conside
The exception attempted to be made, because this provision is found in the code of practice, and not in an ordinary statute, is without any foundation, There is no repealing clause to it, except in relation to articles of the civil code to which it may be repugnant; no rule presented for its construction which places it on different grounds from other laws. Act of 1824, 178.
One of.the,.points made by the appellee is, that the goods were delivered as a collateral Security, and that there was no transfer of the property. The evidence, we think, shews that the securing of a, debt due to the plaintiffs was the motive that induced the purchase; but the
The cause was remanded to ascertain the date of the sous seingprive act, under which the plaintiffs claim. It appears by the evidence taken on the second trial, that it was executed the day prior to the seizure. The actual possession being in the plaintiffs, antecedent to, and at the time of the transfer, though not in their own right, did not prevent possession following the title. No further delivery was necessary. None could have been made, unless the vendor first took them out of the hands of the purchaser, and then gave them back again, which would have been a vain ceremony the law does not require.
The judgment of the court below is complained of, as giving the plaintiffs a larger sum than they are entitled to : on this point the opinion of the court is with the appellant. As the goods have been sold by consent of both parties, since the inceptionof the suit, and as the amount of the sale will cover the price the plaintiff" wás to pay, we think the officer who
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the district court be annulled, avoided and reversed; and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the plaintiff do recover of the defendant the sum of five thousand nine hundred and forty-three dollars and seventy-five cents, with costs in both courts.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.