Overton v. Perkins
Overton v. Perkins
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In 1809, William Thomas obtained a judgment in Davidson county court, against George Walker, for about $500. In 1810, an execution issued and was levied on a tract of land in Williamson county, belonging to said Walker, but said tract of land was not sold. After the said levy and return of the execution, Walker died. Several years after the death of Walker, a venditioni exponas issued to the sheriff, commanding him to' sell the land levied on as aforesaid. No process has issued against the personal representative, heirs, or tertenants, since, the death of Walker, The complainant
This cause has been twice argued before us with great zeal and ability, notwithstanding which, after the most elaborate investigation and mature reflection, on the part of the court, we feel that it is far from being free from difHculty.
The first question that presents itself is, whether after an execution has been levied on land and returned, but the land not sold on or before the return day of. the execution, the sheriff can proceed to sell the land without other process. Nothing is better settled, than that a sheriff who has levied on goods may sell them after the return of the writ, and even after he goes out of office, without a venditioni exponaSé
It is earnestly and forcibly argued for the defendant, that the sheriff has the same powers in relation to land, that he has over goods upon which a levy has been made. That by the act of George the Second, lands were subjected to the payment of debts; and the act of 1777, authorised the fieri facias to run against lands as well as goods, and that theie is no distinction, either as to their liability, or the sheriff’s power over them. We do not think that the conclusion to which consel arrive, follows necessarily from the premises. The very nature of the property creates a legitimate ground of legal distinction in relation to the powers of the sheriff. Goods are moveable, and capable of being taken by the sheriff into possession. They are liable to be wasted in the hands of the debtor, and hence the policy of the law in requiring the sheriff to take them in his possession. As possession of goods indicates ownership, and is in fact part of the title to them, it follows, that the sheriff would acquire by his levy and possession, a special property in them. Having thus deprived the general owner, the debtor, of the possession of his goods, the execution is satisfied' by the levy, if the goods were of value equal to its amount. With all these legal consequences resulting from the levy on goods, it
But how different is the situation and powers- of the sheriff, in almost all (hese particulars in relation to land. It is not capable of being wasted, therefore there is no necessity for the sheriff to take possession. He acquires no special property in the land levied on, and can maintain no action in relation to it; nor does a levy on land satisfy the execution.
In view of these considerations we cannot give our assent to the proposition, that a levy on land, one of the slightest and most undefined acts a ministerial officer can perform, shall have the tremendous effect of divesting the freehold right of a man in possession, and of investing the. sheriff with the power of selling it after the execution has spent its force. If he can sell at all after the return of the execution, he can sell at any distance of time afterwards, upon the mere request of the creditor and his own íecollection that a levy was made. In this view of the subject we are supported by the supreme court of North Carolina. In the case of Barden vs. McKinnie, 4 Hawk. Rep. 263, it is determined that a sale by the sheriff, of real estate, after the return of a fi. fa., and without a new writ, is made without authority, and passes no title. It is true, that in South Carolina, 1 Constitutional Rep. 324: 2 Bays Rep. 129: and in Kentucky, 4 Bibb’s Rep. 345, a different doctrine prevails. In those cases no distinction is taken between personal and real estate, and the principles which have been so long settled in relation to the former, are made to apply in their whole extent to the latter. Because lands are by statute, made liable to be sold for the satisfaction of judgments, they hold, as the counsel for the
Upon the whole, we conceive it to be more consonant to principle and to sound policy, to declare that a sale of land made after the return of the fi. fa., without other process having issued, to be without authority and void.
2. But it is contended, that as in this case, there was issued
The doctrine of relation is a fiction of law, intended to .subserve the ends of justice; nor will it apply in any case, ■except ¡between the same parties, and for the same ends; ■but it shall never work a wrong to strangers, or defeat collateral acts which are lawful. 13 Co. 41. But give the doctrine of relation all the force and effect contended for, still the difficulty in this case is not obviated. If a venditoni exponas •must issue, to confer on the sheriff power to proceed with the sale, that process must have parties in being. If it be awarded and bear teste after the death of the execution debtor, it cannot be against him and command the sale of his land. He cannot be spoken of as existing, and he can have no land, that having vested in the heirs. It is not like the oase of the award of an execution after the death, but which bears teste before the death. Tn that case, the award has relation to the teste, and the process speaks at a time when the party was in life. But in this case, it is not the award of the process 'that has relation to a time before the death, and speaking .as of a period before that event, but it is the act the process commands to be done, which relates to another act done before the death. Take the case of a justice’s execution levied on land. The constable has no authority to sell by virtue of the levy alone, but he must bring the process into court with his levy endorsed upon it, and the court direct a venditioni exponas to issue. When the sale is made, it relates to the levy and passes the title from that time. But although this be so, if the debtor had died after the levy, and ¡before the order of sale, the court could not proceed to make ■the order and award the process, without having new parties. It would be absurd to have a judicial proceeding against a dead man, and a solemn order directing land to be sold as.
Decree affirmed.
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