Corbett v. Maine
Corbett v. Maine
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs and defendants severally claim under levies upon the real estate of one Edmund Smith. Those under which the tenants derive title are prior in time. Their title, therefore, depends upon the validity of those levies.
The executions, upon which the levies relied upon by the tenants were made, are against Edmund Smith and two others. The exception taken to their validity is that the officer’s return does not show the debtor, upon whose real estate the levy was made, chose an appraiser.
By the certificate of the appraisers, it appears that they appraised certain real estate " as the estate in fee simple of the debtor within named Edmund Smith.”
The appraisal was of the real estate " of the debtor within named Edmund Smith.” The notice was "to the within named Edmund Smith” to choose an appraiser and time was given him in which to choose. The choice of an appraiser was by " the debtor, and the execution were satisfied by a levy upon the real estate " of Edmund Smith the debtor aforesaid.” Edmund Smith is described as the "debtor within named” and "the debtor aforesaid” in officer’s return. No reference is made to any other debtor or debtors. The natural and obvious construction of the return is that the debtor, by whom the appraiser was chosen, — " was the debt- or within named” whose land was seized and to whom notice was given. The terms "the debtor” and "the debtor aforesaid” have reference to "the debtor -within named Edmund Smith.”
The case is distinguishable from that of Harriman v. Cummings, 45 Maine, 351, and from that of Ware v. Barker, 49 Maine, 358. Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Horace Corbett versus Maine and Union Banks and Oliver R. Davis versus Same
- Status
- Published