Connor v. Archer
Connor v. Archer
Opinion of the Court
Curia, per
The sheriff’s liability to be attached, depends on the order made by consent on the 20th October; and it would not be right to connect with the decision of this case any thing which happened before that time. The plaintiff then consented to take an order for an attachment nisi, allowing the sheriff until the sale day in December, to sell Anderson’s property, and pay over the money. The sheriff did so, as far as he was able. Only a small amount remained unsold, and that was because he was unable during the legal hours of sale to effect it. It is only in this particular that this case differs from M'Lean vs. Dubose, 1 Bailey, 646. As far as practicable, equal and even handed justice should be dealt to all. We must not have one rule for the sheriff of Darlington, and a different rule for the sheriff of Anderson. The order for an attachment carries along with it the idea that the sheriff is in some default. If it be gross neglect, the court orders him to be attached forthwith for his contemptuous disregard of the process of the court; if the neglect be slight, or the plaintiff assents, the order usually allows time for the sheriff to do what the writ commands; to wit: to sell the defendant’s property, and pay over the money. If within
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.