
    William E. Murphy v. John Thielen, Sheriff, and others.
    A seizure under afi.fa., “ of any money,” which the party in whose hands the seizure was made, “ has now or may hereafter have in virtue of his office of judicial sequestrator,” will not, as against other creditors of the debtor whose property was sequestered, embrace any funds not,' at the time, in the hands of the sequestrator. Per Curiam. A sum of money which may or may not be received, without any specification of amount, even by conjecture or approximation, is a thing two vague to form the object of a seizure.
    Appeal from the District Court of the First District, Buchanan, J.
   Bullard, J.

Murphy being subrogated to the rights and actions of Parish, a judgment creditor of C. F. Hozey, took a rule upon the Sheriff of the District Court of the First District, upon F. Buisson, who had been appointed by the Commercial Court a judicial sequestrator, and upon the Branch Bank of Alabama at Mobile, another judgment creditor of Hozey, to show cause, why a sum of about $571, admitted to be in the hands of Thielen, the .Sheriff, who had been made garnishee in the case, should not be paid over to him, in discharge of his judgment against Hozey. The District Court having discharged the rule, on the ground, that the Branch Bank of Alabama had made a previous seizure of the fund, Murphy appealed.

The seizure to which the court thus gave effect, appears to have been made originally in the hands of Buisson, as judicial sequestrator. The levy was made on the 12th of April, 1841, and the Sheriff’s return shows that he seized, in the hands of Buisson ihe judicial sequestrator, all the properly or effects of Hozey in his possession or control, to an amount sufficient to satisfy the writ, and particularly any money, he might now or hereafter have in virtue of his office as judicial sequestrator,” &c.

We are of opinion, that this seizure did not embrace any fund not at that time in the hands of Buisson. A sum of money which may or may not be received, without any .specification of amount, even by conjecture or approximation, is a thing too vague to form the object of a seizure under execution. It cannot be identified, nor when sold, handed over to the purchaser by the Sheriff. Not only the fund in the hands of Thielen, afterwards levied on by Murphy, never was in the possession of Buisson, but it appears to have been collected afterwards by that officer, who, it is true, carried it to the credit of the judicial sequestrator on his books,, but did not pay it over, it having, in the meantime, been seized in his hands by the present appellant. Now, although it may be true, as assumed by our leqrned brother of the District Court, that the appointment of Buisson still subsisting, authorizing him to collect all'the official dues of Hozey, the late Sheriff, Thielen, would have been authorized to pay over such sums as may have been, afterwards collected by him, it does not follow, we think, that a specific amount thus collected, is embraced in the vague description, of the original seizure, so far as other creditors of Hozey are concerned.

Budd and Rousseau, for the appellant.

Thielen and Buisson, pro se. Chinn, for the other defendants.

We are of opinion, that the court erred in. not decreeing the fund to belong to Murphy, the appellant.

The judgment of. the District Court is, therefore, avoided and reversed ; and it is further ordered and decreed that the rule be made absolute, and that the defendant, Thielen, pay over to the plaintiff $334 37, the amount in his hands at the time of Murphy’s seizure, and that the costs of both courts be paid by the appellees, the Branch Bank of Alabama.  