Zook v. Smith
Zook v. Smith
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 11th of September, 1872, the complainant bought a tract of land lying in Knox county of one Overton, and on the 17th of October thereafter, took
The defendant Smith had, on the 9th of November, 3869, recovered a judgment in Campbell county before a justice against said Overton and others for $101.20. The said judgment was certified to Knox county, and on the 13th of June, 1872, execution was issued upon it, and levied upon the land in question as the property of Overton, and the execution and levy were duly returned by the officer to the justice issuing it, to be by him returned to the next term of the Circuit Court of Knox county for condemnation of the land. The next term succeeding the time of the levy and return to the justice began on the second Monday in October thereafter, but the justice failed to return the papers until the February term, 1873, the complainant having in the meantime bought the land, and caused his deed to be registered, without notice of the previous levy. It appears that the plaintiff in the justice’s judgment employed an agent to come from Campbell to Knox county to see to it that the execution and levy were duly returned to the Circuit Court for condemnation, and that the agent proposed to the justice to return said papers, but the
The Code, sec. 3080, requires that when an execution issued by a justice is levied on real estate, it shall be the duty of the justice to whom the same is returned, to return the execution, together with the judgment and the papers in the case, to the next Circuit Court of his county for condemnation.
It is conceded that there is no bad faith on either side of this controversy, and that the dilemma has grown out of the negligence of the justice to return the papers. The defendant had undoubtedly acquired a lien upon the land by his levy, but this lien, which, by a compliance with the terms of the statute, might have acquired the dignity of a lis pendens, was suffered to remain a secret lien, which is not favored in law. The justice, in such a case, in returning the papers, was doing a ministerial act, in the double character of an officer of the law and the agent of the plaintiff in the judgment. The mere levy of a justice’s execution upon real estate, while it creates a
The paper in the hands of the justice, then, as in this case, though a lien, constituted a secret lien, and unless returned to the next term, as required, did not operate as a notice which would protect it against an intermediate innocent purchaser of the land, who had taken a deed and paid out his money for the land in good faith, without notice of the levy. We must hold, therefore, that the complainant has the right to the relief he seeks. The Chancellor so held, and his decree will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.