The writ of attachment issued in the action of Livermore v. Stine commanded the Sheriff to attach and safely keep the property of the defendant in that action, or so much as might be sufficient to satisfy the demand of the plaintiffs. This writ had come to the hand of the plaintiff here, while *615he was yet holding the office of Sheriff. He had partly executed it by seizing certain property, and had begun to execute that portion of its command which required him to safely keep the property. In this condition of things the plaintiff’s term of office, as Sheriff", expired, and the first question made is, whether it was his duty to turn over the attached property to his successor in office.
This question is to be determined by reference to' the provisions of the Act concerning Sheriffs. (Hitt. G. L., Sec. 6849, et seq.) It is provided by this statute (Sec. 6885, Subdivision 5) that the outgoing shall turn over to the incoming Sheriff “all executions, attachments, and final process, except those which he has executed or has begun to execute by the collection of money or a levy on property.” A writ of attachment in his hands and under which nothing whatever has been done is to be turned over of course. But if the writ has been executed or if the outgoing officer has already begun its execution, it falls within the express exception found in the statute, and is, therefore, not to be turned over to the new incumbent. The Act"nowhere provides that property held under a levy of a writ of attachment is to be surrendered to the new Sheriff. The only provision as to turning over property as such is found in the first subdivision of that section of the Act just referred to, and the property there mentioned is “the property of the county” in the hands of the retiring officer. We cannot, in the absence of an express provision of the statute, deduce from the statute any duty to turn over to the new incumbent property held under a writ of attachment, for whenever property is so held by an outgoing Sheriff, it must be because he has executed the writ so far as making seizure of the property, and has begun to execute it by keeping the property in his possession pursuant to the command of the writ, in either of which cases it seems to be the intent of the Act that the officer commencing to execute process shall complete it, notwithstand*616ing a change of the incumbency. (McKay v. Harrower, 27 Bart. 468.)
The only other point to be noticed is the effect upon the writ of attachment of the deposit made by Stine, the defendant in attachment, with the Clerk, of the amount of the judgment. A payment of the judgment made by the defendant in an attachment suit entitles him to a release of the property held under the writ of attachment, under section one hundred and thirty-three of the Practice Act; but a mere deposit of the amount, or, in the language of the answer and findings, a payment made to the Clerk, is not such a payment.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Crockett did not express an opinion.