Balisle v. Johnson
Balisle v. Johnson
Opinion of the Court
Defendant, Johnson, sheriff of McDowell County, was required by McKenzie, a judgment creditor of Conner, to levy an execution upon and sell as the property of Conner, certain saw logs claimed by Balisle, the father-in-law of Conner, and a doubt having arisen whether said property was liable to
The third section of the same chapter provides: “3. If such bond be not given within a reasonable time after such notice, the officer may refuse to levy on such property, or restore it to the person from whose possession it was taken, as the case may be. If it be given, where there has been no levy, within a reasonable time, or after a levy, before the property is so restored, it shall he returned within twenty days to the clerk’s office of the circuit court of the county in which such property may be and the claimant or purchaser of such property shall, after such bond is so returned, be barred of any action against the officer levying thereon, provided the security therein be good at the time of taking it.”
Plaintiff, after said bond had been executed and returned to the clerk’s office, sued Johnson and the sureties on his official bond for the value of the property so levied on and sold, and obtained the judgment complained of.
The first question presented for decision by defendants’ special plea number one, rejected, is, whether by force of the statute the omission of the officer who took the bond to return the same to the clerk’s office within the twenty days prescribed by the statute, deprives him of the defense set up in his plea. The rejected plea avers that said bond had been returned to and was then in such clerk’s office, and that plaintiff had notice that such bond had been demanded and given, and also, full information respecting the same, and of the existence and place of deposit thereof, and well knew that the same was accessible to him for all legal purposes, both prior and subsequent to the sale of the property under said execution.
Our statute, sections 2 and 3, of chapter 107, was taken from the Code of Virginia, which supplemented 1 and 2 Will, iv. c. 58, section 6, originally adopted into the Code of. that state, enacted to relieve sheriffs and other officers .from the rigorous rules of the common law. Murfree on Sheriffs, sections 582, 583, 607, 608.
Our opinion is that the provision of said section 3, relating to the time of returning the bond to the clerk’s office, properly
As was held in Hunter v. Trustees of Berkeley Springs, 47 W. Va. 343: “Laws prescribing the duties of public officers are usually peremptory or mandatory, while those fixing a time for the performance of such duties are directory.” As already noted, while the time for returning the bond is prescribed, the statute says, “after such bond is so returned” action against the officer shall be barred. In State ex rel. v. Buchanan, 24 W. Va. 362; it was decided, that the statute which requires the assessor to.deliver a copy of the personal property book to the county, clerk on or before the first day of July is directory; that the right of the state to have her. revenue assessed and collected could not be lost by the laches of her agent. Suppose in the case before us the sheriff and his bondsmen were insolvent, would right of action on such indemnifying bond by the claimant of the property be lost because of the omission of the officer to return it to the clerk’s office within the twenty days? or suppose it had never been returned, but retained in the officer’s possession, would his omission to make such return deprive the claimant or the purchaser of the property of right of action thereon? Certainly such default of the officer could not be fraught with such consequences, and it certainty would constitute no defense to the principal or sureties on the bond.
If this be so, what good reason can be interposed for deny
The only other point necessary to be considered, in view of a possible result on the trial on the issue presented by defendants ’ plea, is as to the true measure of damages in a suit by a claimant against the officer for the property so taken. The property taken was logs, not manufactured lumber, and of course tlie only true measure of damages would be the market value of the logs at the time and place where seized and taken into custody by the officer, not the value of the lumber manufactured therefrom. Much of the evidence admitted over objection related to the value of the lumber in the logs. The evidence should have been properly limited.
Óur opinion is to reverse the judgment, set aside the verdict of the jury, and to overrule plaintiff’s objection to defendants’ special plea number one, and to permit the same to be filed, and to remand the ease to the circuit court with leave to plaintiff to take issue on said plea, if desired, and for further proceedings to be had therein according to the principles herein enunciated, and further according to rules and principles governing courts of law.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Balisle v. Johnsons.
- Status
- Published