Bowles v. Wilcoxen
Bowles v. Wilcoxen
Opinion of the Court
The judgment of the court was pronounced by
Wilcoxen, the defendant in this suit, obtained a judgment against the present plaintiff, Bowles, for a sum of money, and for twenty-eight hogsheads and one barrel of sugar, and twelve hundred and forty-three gallons of molasses, of the crop produced-by the latter in 1844, which judgment was affirmed by this court. See 1 Ann. Rep. 230. That suit was commenced by a provisional seizure of a quantity of sugar, which Boioles was permitted to bond on the day on which the seizure was made. The bond was returned into court,
The right of the plaintiff to an appeal from the judgment rendered on the rule, has been much discussed at bar, but the question is not before us in a shape to authorise the expression of an opinion in relation to it; nor is the enquiry material to the decision of the true issues Which the controversy presents.
It is contended that the bond executed by the plaintiff was legally received by the sheriff; that its effect was to release’ the sugar from the seizure, and to deprive the defendant of his right to claim a specific execution of his judgment. The only authority relied on by the plaintiffin support of the right to bond property provisionally seized, is the act of 1839. That statute we understand to relate alone to ships or other vessels, the provisional seizures of which it permits to be set aside, on a bond being executed in favor of the plaintiff as in cases of attachment. The 18th section of the act, which provides for the’ disposition to be made by the sheriff of bonds given to release property from provisional seizure, must be considered to refer to cases enumerated in the 12th section, of ships and other vessels, the only species of property to which the right of bonding in such proceedings has been extended. Acts 1839, p, 166, ss. 12, 18. The act of the sheriff was clearly illegal, and the unauthorised bond taken by him opposed no impediment to a specific execution of the judgment, if, in other respects, it had been practicable.
'lhe question which next arises is, whether the defendant, under the facts of the present case, could resort to a distringas to enforce a compliance with the judgment which he had obtained. The contract of lease, upon which that judgment was rendered, stipulated for the payment in kind of one-fourth of a crop of sugar and molasses, as rent. The judgment was in conformity with this contract, and the defendant would, under ordinary circumstances, have had his election, upon the refusal of the debtor to surrender the objects, the delivery
The appropriate office of-the-writ is to-enforce the-performance of things that are possible, and not to punish parties fox> the failure to pex-form those which are impracticable. When the impossibility of a specific'execution becaxxxe apparent to the judge below, he correctly dispensed the defendant fx-om that part of the judgment; but fell into -tke error of directing-that other sugar and molasses should be delivered in satisfaction, and of authorising the use of the distringas t'o enforce the-delivery. The writ- could only* have been used to coerce the specific performance; and when that end could no longer be accomplished, it should have been-revoked’; and the party left to other i-emedies. In view of the facts of this case, w-e think that the defendant was not entitled to a distringas, and that the judge erred in nobsustaining the injunction.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the District Court be reversed, and that the injunction sued out by the plaintiff be made perpetual; the appellee paying the costs of both courts;
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