Hale's Appeal
Hale's Appeal
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
Under the 4th section of the Act of 21st March 1772, a practice prevailed, borrowed, no doubt, from that under the- 16th section of 29 Car. 2, from which the section was almost literally copied, of indicating the precise time of the receipt by the sheriff of executions. Although the clause of the statute, required only the day of the month and year to be indicated, yet it expressly declared, that it should bind the property of the defendant from the time the writ should come into his hands. This necessarily fixed the order of priority of writs in the application of the proceeds of sale. The first writ which bound the goods or chattels of a defendant was to be first paid. Such was the rule under the statute of Charles 2. See Watson on Sheriffs 176.
So firmly fixed had this practice become, that even before the passage of the Act of 1836, it was a contested question whether the precise time of the receipt of an execution, Avhen not endorsed by the sheriff, was provable as a matter in pais. That it was, see 2 Yeates 277, 3 Penna. Rep. 246, and 2 Watts 303.
The Act of 16th June 1836 Avas evidently declaratory of this practice, and of what might not improperly be called our common laAV on the subject. The sheriff is by this act required to endorse the day and hour in which he receives an execution. This was Avhat he did in obedience to the practice under the Act of 1772. But to do so, is directory under the Act of 1836. What if it be not entered by the sheriff? Is the creditor, for this omission of the officer, to be postponed, and turned round to a suit against the sheriff? This would be vexatious to both the creditor and sheriff, and not only occasion delay to a party who was in no default, but Avould give a technical and inequitable advantage to a junior execution, Avhereon the time is endorsed. When the sheriff does note the precise time of the receipt of the Avrit, it is doubtless conclusive. But if he omit to do so, parol proof of it is not obnoxious to the objection that it contradicts the return on the writ. Nor is the entry, even when made, a record. So it is not the case of an attempt to supply a record by parol: 2 Watts 203.
The actual date is intended to fix the rights of creditors, and as oral proof is not inadmissible, on either of the grounds mentioned, Avhy shall it not be received ? The point to be established
We are therefore of opinion that the learned judge of the Court of Common Pleas decided rightly in setting aside the auditor’s report, and in awarding distribution according to the actual time of the receipt of the Luther execution, which was prior to the appellant’s.
Decree affirmed and appeal dismissed, at the costs of the appellant.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.