Knight v. Mayberry
Knight v. Mayberry
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of trespass quare clausum. It is instituted against a deputy sheriff and creditor, and the act proved, is an entry upon the land for the purpose of levying an execution against one Morse. The facts, as they appear, are substantially these. Morse had the legal title to the land. In 1847 he gave a bond to the plaintiff to convey the land to him upon payment of certain notes, the last payable in seven years.
In 1852 the defendant Mayberry attached the land as the property of Morse. The bond was acknowledged and recorded in 1854. In November, 1857, defendant recovered judgment in his said suit, and, on the seventeenth of the same month, the officer, who is sued, entered upon the land with the appraisers and the creditor, who pointed out the land, to make a levy to satisfy the execution. This levy was completed on the twenty-third of said month. Morse, by deed, conveyed the premises to the plaintiff on the following day, the twenty-fourth of November. The whole amount due on the bond and notes' was not paid until the last named day.
The plaintiff offered to prove that the creditor, the defendant Mayberry, knew of the purchase and occupancy of the land by the plaintiff; that his levy of his execution was fraudulent as against the plaintiff, and that he had, by his attachment and proceedings, fraudulently prevented the plaintiff from paying his notes to Morse, and from obtaining a perfect title in law.
The first question that naturally arises is, whether this action of trespass can be maintained against the officer and his assistants, the only act being proceedings necessary to levy the execution. The legal record title clearly remained all the time in Morse, as whose property the land was levied upon. The plaintiff was in possession; but he had not any deed of the land. He might have equitable rights under his bond; but, in law, he was only tenant at will to Morse.
We are not prepared to say that, in such a case, an action of trespass can be maintained against an officer and creditor,
The protection which commissioners, appointed by the Court to estimate damages, or to assign dower, or to do any act under such authority, derived from the law, rests upon the principle, that what the law authorizes to be done on the premises will be regarded as lawfully done. The entry, and acts following necessary to the performance, cannot be regarded as a trespass, or such a violation of the legal rights of the party in possession, as will sustain an action.
We do not intend to intimate any opinion in relation to the legal or equitable rights of the parties, beyond the point above considered.
We may properly say, that the questions presented in the able arguments of the counsel, seem to belong appropriately to the equity jurisdiction of the Court, and could in that form
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rufus Knight versus Stephen P. Mayberry & al.
- Status
- Published