Spangler v. Commonwealth ex rel. Martin
Spangler v. Commonwealth ex rel. Martin
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In a scire facias on a recognizance given by the sheriff and his securities, the breach assigned was for a false return of nulla bona, on a fieri facias against one Joseph Snodgrass.
The general question referred to the court is, whether or not the plaintiffs were entitled to recover. This special case is very incorrect and imperfect; for whether the goods were the goods of Snodgrass, the defendant in the execution, is not a fact stated, and the court cannot induce or infer it from the circumstances, and therefore the cause goes back for that defect; but the court consider it proper to state their general views on the question agitated.
In England it is certainly the course, whe2'e the sheriff has a doubt-respecting the property of the goods, to inquire by a jury in whom the property is, or else not to meddle at all with such goods as do not plainly appear to be the proper goods of the defendant. ’ The finding of this jury or inquest, will justify him in returning nulla bona, and mitigate damages in an action of trespass, if the goods seized should not happen to be the goods of the defendant. Dalt. Sher. 140. Gilb. Evid. 21. This finding by the sheriff’s inquest does not settle the question of property between the litigant parties. It is not a proceeding immediately from the court, but merely an inquest of office to indemnify the sheriff in making the return to the writ, and the court will not set aside the inquest, nor order a new writ of inquiry; for this is an inquiry merely collateral to the cause, and is no part of the judicial proceedings. 2 Tid, 921. The sheriff, in seizing the goods, acts at bis peril, and therefore it would be a harsh doctrine to leave him unprotected and exposed to loss where he acts bona fide: this would be a severe line of justice. On the other hand, it would not seem reasonable that he should on shallow pretences refuse to execute the writ; for this would be leaving a plaintiff open to a connivance between the defendant and the sheriff to conjure up some unfounded claim of property in a stranger; and I would have been glad to have found the inquest by the sheriff introduced among us, but this never has been.done in this state, arid would seem, from the decision in Weaver v. Lawrence, (1 Dall. 156,) not to be warranted. It has been usual for the sheriff to require reasonable security in case of reasonable doubt, and this has been so generally acquiesced in, that no co2itroversy has before this arisen on it. Rut a case might arise where the sheriff, on very frivolous grounds, might refuse to act without unreasonable security to indemnify him. The plahitiff, might be poor, and not able to satisfy the sheriff as to the security offered. He might be distant, and the sheriff, on the most groundless claim, refuse to act; and, where the goods are found in the hands of a defendant claimed by another under a bill of sale or mortgage, and suffered t,o continue in the possession of the supposed vendoi', who trusts the goods to him on his personal credit, to use as his own; thus enabling him to induce unwary 2«en to
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SPANGLER against The COMMONWEALTH, for the use of the Administrators of MARTIN
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published