Crossman v. Owen

Tapley, J.

The plaintiff, a deputy of the sheriff of the county of Cumberland, being called upon to make an attachment of goods upon a writ, required of the attaching creditors an indemnity for so doing. An agreement to indemnify having been furnished, and the .-goods attached, he proceeded, under the direction of the creditors’ ■counsel, to make sale of them upon the writ and hold the'proceeds for application upon the executions when issued. A sale was made, the net proceeds of which were nine hundred and fifty-one dollars and twenty-three cents ($951.23). The sale was made the ninth day of January, 1866, and on the twenty-fourth day of the same month the creditors, now represented by this defendant, received of the plaintiff two hundred and sixty-three dollars of the proceeds, to be applied and accounted for upon the execution which should issue on the judgment recovered upon their claim.

In August following, executiou having issued, this sum was duly .•accounted .for upon the same.

On the third day of April, 1866, one Jacob Harris commenced .■an action against the sheriff to recover the value of the goods thus ¡attached, alleging his ownership of the same at the time of the attachment by this plaintiff, and upon due proceedings recovered judgment for $1401.19, damage, and costs of suit, taxed at $113.66, *531which sums the plaintiff has been obliged to pay from his own goods and estate upon due proceedings against him, by reason of the attachment. The plaintiff having been obliged to pay this amount by reason of the attachment, now seeks to recover the same upon the agreement, with his reasonable expenses incurred by reason of making the attachment.

The agreement given and now sought to be executed provides, that, “whereas Charles Crossman, a deputy sheriff within and for the county of Cumberland, has attached on several writs or mesne processes in favor of the undersigned, a stock of goods in the store lately occupied by William J. Harmon of Brunswick, as the’ property of said Harmon, to secure the several demands due us respectively. Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises and of one dollar to each of ns paid before the execution hereof, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, we do hereby promise and agree to and with said Crossman, his heirs and assigns that we will well and truly indemnify said Crossman for so attaching and taking said goods, and save him harmless from all actions, costs, claims or demands of all persons by reason of his said attachment, and holding said goods as aforesaid.

In testimony whereof we have hereunto subscribed our names this twenty-seventh day of December, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and sixty-five.”

To excuse themselves from the liability assumed by them on account of the attachment, it is averred that the subsequent proceedings of the officer were not in accordance with the requirements of the statute concerning the sale of the goods, and therefore the plaintiff became a trespasser ab initio.

Without passing upon the soundness of this proposition it may be enough to say, that if the debtor in the original processes was not the owner of the goods, and Jacob Harris was, at the time they were taken by attachment, the subsequent proceedings can make him no more of a trespasser whether regular or irregular, and he would be entitled to recover their value regardless of these proceedings.

*532As an evidence that they were in fact the goods of Harris, the record of the judgment recovered' in his favor against the sheriff is introduced, and seems to establish this fact.

It is said that this does not necessarily follow, because an action of trespass may be sustained by any party who has possession of goods against any one having no title, or right of possession, when he has unlawfully taken them into his possession.

This is true ; but the action is not sustained because plaintiff has possession, but because the possession is sufficient evidence of title against a party showing none. The action is founded upon the plaintiff’s title, and his possession is the evidence of it, in such cases.

The action of Harris v. Parker was founded upon the allegation of ownership in the plaintiff. The defendant in that case relied upon the ownership of one Harmon, and so far as can be •gathered from the judgment, the issue was this ownership, and was decided in favor of Harris.

We find nothing in the judgment, and nothing in the admissions made by the parties in this case, to show that the alleged irregularities in any way affected the rights or interests of the respondents in that ease.

That it may have done so is not quite sufficient to find,that it did.

We think this judgment, with that recovered by the sheriff against the plaintiff, admitted without objection, having been satisfied, entitles the plaintiff to maintain this action; and that he is entitled to recover the amount of the judgment of Harris v. Parker, with interest since, less any balance of the proceeds of the sale on the original process, in his hands at the time the Harris judgment was recovered, the action of trespass against Parker being a confirmation of title in the proceeds held by his servant and deputy, the present plaintiff.

Judgment for plaintiff accordingly.

Appleton, C. J., Walton, Dickerson and Danforth, JJ., concurred. Cutting, J., did not concur.