false return and neglect and refusal to execute said writ, and seeking to recover damages. Plaintiffs had judgment, and a motion for new trial having been made and denied, defendants appeal.
The principal ground of defense is, that when the Sheriff went to execute the writ, he found other parties in possession than those named in the complaint and judgment, who claimed to be rightfully in possession, and not in privity with the defendants, and not subject to be dispossessed under the writ, who informed the Sheriff that if he turned them out, it would be at his peril; .that, thereupon, he notified the plaintiffs in the action of said claim and threat, and demanded an indemnity before proceeding to execute the writ, which they refused to give, and upon that ground he declined to assume the responsibility of executing the writ, and returned it with his doings and reasons for not executing it. If this is a good defense, that is, if defendant was entitled to demand indemnity under the circumstances, then the judgment is erroneous and must be reversed, for this state of facts appeared at the time when the plaintiff rested, and the motion for a nonsuit on this ground was made and denied, and no evidence tending to show the return to be false in fact had been introduced. Besides, subsequently, there was an instruction to the jury, not very well drawn, perhaps, but substantially presenting the question asked by the defendant and refused, to which refusal an exception was duly taken. This question was not presented when the case was here before.
There can be no doubt that when an attachment or execution is placed in the hands of an officer to be executed, he may demand indemnity of the plaintiff in the execution before he can be required to seize property in the possession of third parties claiming to be the owners, and that if the plaintiff, upon demand, fails to indemnify the officer, and he, thereupon, returns the writ nulla bona, an action for false returns cannot be maintained, even if it should turn out that the goods so found in the hands of strangers claiming to own [459]them, were the goods of the defendant in the writ. (Marshall v. Hosmer, 4 Mass. 63; Bond v. Ward, 7 Mass. 125; Marsh v. Gold, 2 Pick. 290; Chamberlain v. Beller, 18 N. Y. 117.) Where statutes exist providing for calling a Sheriff’s jury preliminary to demanding indemnity, it may he necessary to call a jury before demanding the indemnity, unless the calling of a jury be waived. (Curtis v. Patterson, 8 Cow. 67.) In Marsh v. Gold, Mr. Chief Justice Parker says: “An officer called upon to serve a precept either by attaching property or arresting the person, if there be any reasonable grounds to doubt his authority to act in the particular case, has a right to ask for an indemnity. He is not obliged to serve process in civil actions at his own peril, when the plaintiff in the suit is present, and may take the responsibility upon himself. And, it has been decided, that the Sheriff has a right to require indemnity of the creditor, when he shall be directed to attach chattels, the property in which may be questionable. (Marshall v. Hosmer, 4 Mass. 63.) The same right exists when the Sheriff shall be directed to arrest the body of any man, and he has reasonable doubts of the identity of the person. There can be no reason why the same principle should not apply where there may be doubts of the lawfulness of arrest on other grounds.” (2 Pick. 289.) And in Chamberlain v. Better, Mr. Justice Roosevelt says: “ The officer, in demanding the bond, sought no advantage to himself, but simply desired, as it was natural he should, to protect himself against loss. The risk he was required to run was not for his benefit, but for the benefit of the attaching creditor. If the goods, moreover, as the creditor alleged, were the property of his debtor beyond dispute, he, the creditor, could not be injured by giving the indemnity, and if they were not, it was right that he who, for his own supposed advantage, insisted on the seizure, should take the consequences of the act. Such would seem clearly to be the dictate of common sense and common justice; in other words, in the absence of contrary authority, of common law.” In Tevis v. Ellis, judgment had been recovered against Cal[460]derwood on an adverse title, and Tevis put in possession on a writ of restitution on the 16th of April, 1863. A second judgment had been recovered by other parties against Calderwood by default, and, as alleged, by collusion, for the same premises, on the 5th of June, 1863, upon a complaint filed on the 10th of March, 1863, before Tevis was put in possession. We held that, under the circumstances, the Sheriff would be' a trespasser in turning out Tevis under a writ issued under the second judgment. (25 Cal. 516.) So, in Wattson v. Dowling, 26 Cal. 127, we held that a party rightfully in possession under his own title could not properly be dispossessed under a writ issued in a suit to which he was in no way a party, or in privity with a party, even though he entered after suit brought. And in the present case, when here before, we cited the case of Jones v. Chiles, 2 Dana, 25, as indicating an instance in which a Sheriff would not be justified in turning out a party who has come into possession pending the suit, under a writ of possession issued under a judgment recovered in another suit against the same defendants upon an adverse title. (29 Cal. 136.) There are cases, then, in which the Sheriff would not be justified in turning out parties in possession who are not parties to the suit, or named in the writ, even though they may have entered after suit brought; and the question, whether a party found in possession when the writ issues, but not a party to the suit, must go out or not, is often one of great nicety. To determine the question, it is necessary that the officer should both accurately ascertain the facts, and then determine the law correctly. In both particulars there is great liability to error. This very case affords an excellent illustration of the embarrassment under which an officer would labor, if he was, in such cases, compelled to decide these questions at his peril. After a full litigation of the question, the right of the Sheriff to turn out Brown under the writ, on appeal, and after care-, ful consideration, this Court once held that Brown could not be dispossessed, but on rehearing granted, and after a further and more mature consideration, it was finally determined by [461]a bare majority of the Court that Brown must go out, and on the facts as there presented, that the Sheriff was liable for not executing the writ. If the Courts, after due investigation, with all the means at their command necessary for the purpose, find great difficulty in determining the question, how is a mere ministerial officer, possessing none of their facilities," to ascertain the facts and apply the law correctly? The officer has no personal interest in the matter, and in a case of doubt, like the one in question, when the parties in interest are unwilling to take the responsibility and hold him harmless, why should he be compelled to act at his peril?
We sec no reason why the remarks of Mr. Justice Roosevelt in Chamberlain v. Beller, before cited, do not apply wfith. equal force to the case in hand. We do not perceive that the fact that the premises are specifically described, makes any difference; for we have seen that, even in such cases, there may be parties in possession who cannot be turned out without committing a trespass. Suppose Jones is clearly the owner, and in undisputed possession of a lot, and a suit is brought against Smith, who is out of possession, to recover it, and judgment taken by default, or collusion, there can be no doubt that the ejection of Jones, against Ms protest, under a writ giving a specific description of the premises, would be a trespass. If not, there would be a very easy way of recovering the possession of lands—much easier, and less expensive than serving the owner in possession. A warrant of arrest describes the paity to be arrested. Yet Mr. Chief Justice Parker says, in language already cited: “The same right exists when the Sheriff shall be directed to arrest the body of any one, and he has reasonable doubts of the identity of the person. There can be no reason why the same principle should not apply when there may be doubts of the lawfulness of arrest on other grounds.” (2 Pick. 290, supra.) So, here, there is no reason why the same principle should not apply, where doubts exist, as to whether strangers to the suit, in possession, when the writ issues, maybe lawfully turned out. [462]The judgment, in terms, only authorized “said defendants, I. T. Hull and M. A. Hull, and all persons holding by, through, or under them,” to be turned out of possession; and it is left to the officer to determine, at his peril, whether Brown did hold, “ by, through, or under them.” And so generally, when a stranger to the suit, in possession, claimed to he rightfully there, and not liable to be turned out, although the premises are correctly described, it is still necessary to ascertain the facts, and determine under the law, whether he is liable to go out.