Harwood v. Creel
Harwood v. Creel
Opinion of the Court
On the 27th day of October, 1856, plaintiff recovered a judgment against defendant Thomas H. Creel, for $i 00.95 with interest from the 27th day of October, 1856, till paid and costs, in the circuit court of the county of `Wood. Upon this judgment several writs of flerifacia& were~ issued and duly returned "no property found." Af-
The first section of chapter one hundred and forty-two of the Code of 1SG8, provides that the sheriff, or other officer, levying a distress warrant, or a writ oí fieri faeias, issued from the office of the clerk of a circuit court, may take from the debtor an . undertaking signed by himself, or by some person for him, with one or more good securities, and that upon the giving of the undertaking, as herein provided, the property, so levied upon, shall be permitted to remain in the possession of the debtor, at his risk. It often happens that a sheriff levies a fieri fa-eias, a very short time before the return day thereof, when there is not time to advertise and sell the property. It is competent, in such case, for the sheriff to sell the property and receive the purchase money therefor, after the return day of the execution, by virtue of the levy of the execution. So also the sheriff might, properly, receive the debt, in relief of the property, so levied on. And so I apprehend it is competent for the sheriff, in such case, to take from the debtor an undertaking and permit the property to remain with the debtor at his risk, as provided by said first- section. Dix v. Evans 3 Munf., 308. This being true, it is evident that the mere fact that the undertaking is taken after the return day of the execution, does not alone render the undertaking either void or voidable. It seems that on a motion to quash a forthcoming bond the appellate court will regard the execution as part of the record. Couch v. Miller, 2 Leigh., 545. This, it has been said, is not so, however, in all cases. See the cases referred to in the opinion of Judge Cabell, in the last named case. It seems that where there was an appearance, and the-bond objected to in the court below, on the ground of being unauthorized or. variant from the execution, that the appellate court will look at the execution as part of the record, though the court does
In this State the undertaking has been substitued forth e forthcoming bond, and, generally, the same rules and principles apply to the undertaking as to the forthcoming bond. In Shaw v. McCullough, 3 W. Va., 260, it was held, that “ parties who voluntarily enter into a forthcoming bond are estopped from all inquiry into the regularity and validity of the levy of the writ of fieri facias upon which the bond was taken.”
In the case of Dix v. Evans, 3 Munf., 308, in the syllabus, it is stated “ The sheriff's failing to mention, in his return of an execution, one of the negroes on whom it -was levied, is no ground for reversing a judgment on a forfeited forthcoming bond in which that negro is mentioned as one of those on whom such execution was levied.” In the case in judgment the undertaking, on its face, admits the levy of the fieri facias upon the property therein mentioned, which is “ four hay stacks and one straw stack.” This admission, in the absence of proof to the contrary, authorizes the inference or presumption that the writ was levied before the return day
It was not claimed in argument here that the court erred in overruling the motion to quash the notice, and if it was, I do not see that there was any error in this respect.
No other errors have been assigned, and I have found none.
For these reasons the said judgment of- the circuit court of Wood county, rendered in this cause on the 8th day of December, 1873, must be affirmed, with costs and ■damages to the plaintiff in error according to law.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
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