Henry Ware & Son v. Wilson
Henry Ware & Son v. Wilson
Opinion of the Court
The record in this case presents two appeals taken by the sheriff of the parish of Jefferson — one from a judgment decreeing him to be liable on a bond alleged to have been received and accepted by him for the release of certain horses sequestered herein; the other from a judgment on a rule taken by Mm on plaintiffs for the payment of his costs.
We deem it proper here to remark that the record contains no evidence that either the defendant or plaintiffs ever applied for an order to bond the property. A rule for the purpose was taken by one of the intervenors to bond apart, which was accepted by the sheriff, but does not appear to have been served on cither plaintiffs or defendant. It is true the judge, more than a month after it was filed, rendered an order thereon directing the sheriff to permit defendant to give bond, but this action seems to be ex parte and irregular.
The evidence which was excluded is in the record, and satisfactorily shows that the sheriff has not given up the possession and control of the property. What may be his liability for allowing one of the horses
As a sequence to this conclusion, the judgment on the rule taken by the sheriff, which limited his demand for costs to the date of the alleged release, must be changed, and his legal costs allowed to the date claimed in the rule, subject to a credit of five hundred and sixty dollars paid by-plaintiffs.
Section twelve of the act of 1855 (p. 166), amended in 3867 (p. 343), designates what iees of office the sheriff “shall be entitled to demand, and no more.'1’ Sections two and three of the former act declare that an overcharge of any item shall work its forfeiture, and forever bar the clerk or sheriff from collecting the same.
Most of the fees of office in the bill bofore us are overcharged, not allowed by the fee bill, or improperly charged to the plaintiffs in the suit. The items for executing the writ of sequestration, and the mileage, are overcharged, and therefore forfeited. The charge for “ sequestering,” as a separate item, those, for appointing and discharging keepers, for the notice of sequestration, return thereon, and mileage, for making inventory and returning- the writ, being included in the charge, for executing the writ, are not allowable. The items for service and return of petition and citation, being overcharged, are forfeited. The fees in the various interventions are chargeable to the plaintiffs therein irrespectively, and not to the plaintiffs in the main action. The charges in favor of the sheriff of the parish of Orleans, and those for witnesses sent for by order of the court are not sustained by evidence. The following fees of office in the bill filed July 24, 1868, amounting to twenty-three dollars, are all that can be allowed against the plaintiffs in this proceeding, to wit: December 30, 1867, subpena duces tecum and mileage, $2 50; rule and mileage, $2 50; December 16, rule and mileage, $2 50; three subpenas and mileage, $5 70; December 17, motion, order and mileage, $2 50; two subpenas and mileage, $3 80; February 19, 1868, two rules and mileage, $3 50. There were eleven animals under seizure, for the keeping of which, the evidence authorizes an allowance of $8 75 per day, which, for the time embraced in the rule, from November 20, 1867 to June 1, 1868, (one hundred and ninety-four days), amounts to $1697 50. The charge of twenty-five dollars for moving property is also established, making, in all, a total of $1745 50, subject to a credit of five- hundred and sixty dollars.
It is therefore ordered that the two judgments appealed from herein' be reversed, and it is now ordered that there be judgment in favor of J. T. Michel, sheriff, dismissing the rule taken on him by the plaintiffs, II. Ware & Son, on the twenty-fourth January, 1868; it is further
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Henry Ware & Son v. John G. Wilson
- Status
- Published