Lisher v. Pierson

By the Court, Sutherland,

J. The general question presented by the demurrer in this case is, whether a sheriff on a writ or plaint in replevin has a right, after a claim of *348property is made by the defendant and notice thereof given to the sheriff, to proceed and take the property into his possession, or dispossess the defendant thereof, before the claim ProPerty is inquired into or tried according to the statute. This question depends upon the construction to be given to the 6th section of the act to prevent abuses and delays in actions of replevin. (1 R. L. 93.) That section is as follows : “And whereas frequent abuses have been committed in the execution of writs of replevin, by sheriffs making deliverance, notwithstanding due notice and claim of property have been interposed by the defendant or possessor; for the more effectual prevention whereof, be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that if at any time hereafter on a writ or plaint of replevin, the defendant in replevin or possessor, shall claim property in the thing whereof deliverance is sought, and the sheriff, either by himself, his under-sheriff or bailiff, having due notice, shall nevertheless proceed to make deliverance and dispossess such defendant thereof, before the claim of property shall be inquired into or tried according to law, such sheriff, for every such offence, shall, besides being answerable to the defendant for the trespass, forfeit the sum of one hundred pounds.”

The defendant contends that the sheriff may, after claim and notice, take the property into his own possession, and keep it until the right is tried, although it is admitted he cannot deliver it over to the plaintiff. Without stopping to inquire into the strict philological meaning of the term deliverance, whether it means to deliver to, as the defendant contends, or, as the plaintiff insists, “ to liberate,” “ to set free,” “ to deliver from,” the connection in which it stands, appears to me to leave no reasonable doubt of the sense in which it was used by the legislature in the section in question.

The sheriff shall not proceed to make deliverance and dispossess the defendant. There is no ambiguity or doubt as to the meaning of the latter expression. The property is not to be taken from the possession of the defendant; and it is a fundamental rule that one part of a statute must be construed by another, that the whole may, if possible, stand: ut res magis valeat quam pereat. (1 Black. Comm. 89.) It is also a *349rule of equal authority, that if any part of a statute be obscure, it is proper to consider the other parts; for the words and meaning of one part of a statute frequently lead to the sense of another. (Bac. Abr. Statute, 380.) And where the words of a statute are express, plain and clear, they must control doubtful and ambiguous expressions in the same statute, particularly in the same section or clause. When it is declared, therefore, that the sheriff shall not proceed to make deliverance and dispossess the defendant, the legislature clearly intended that the property should not be taken from the defendant. The case of Leonard v. Stacy, (6 Mod. 68, 140,) is an adjudication upon this precise point. That was an action of trespass for entering into the plaintiff’s house and taking away her goods. The defendant justified by virtue of a replevin, and the question was upon a special verdict, whether the taking away after claim of property and notice thereof, did not make him a trespasser ab initia ; and it was held by all the court that it did.

The same rule is laid down in Coke's Litt. 145, b. where it is said that although it be provided by the statute of Marie-bridge, quad vicecomespost querimoniaminde sibifactam ea, sine impedimenta vel contradictions ejus qui dicta averia ceperit, deliver are possit, fyc. yet where the defendant claims property, the sheriff cannot proceed, for it is a rule in law that property ought to be tried by writ. (2 Sellon, 153. Lord St. John v. Saunders, Dyer, 173, 6.) In Bacon's Abr. tit. Replevin, E. 4, it is said, if the defendant in replevin claims property, the sheriff cannot proceed, for property must be tried by writ. In this case, therefore, the plaintiff may have the writ de proprietate probanda to the sheriff, and if it be found for the plaintiff, then the sheriff is to make deliverance; if for the defendant, then he is to proceed no farther. It is not said that he is then to return the properly to the defendant, which would have been the language if it had been taken out of his possession. (Shannon v. Shannon, 1 Schoale & Le Froy, 327, opinion of Lord Redesdale.)

The writ de proprietate probanda is always issued by the plaintiff upon the return by the sheriff of a claim of property. It is an inquest of office, and the defendant has no means *350of hastening the plaintiff’s proceedings. If the property be found for the party claiming it, the plaintiff is not concluded; he may sue out a new writ of replevin by the claim of property. The first suit is substantially determined. • (6 Bacon’s Abr. 65, 6. 2 Sellon, 165. 2 Dunlap, 880, 1.) It may be said that while the question of property is trying, the defendant may remove and secrete the goods, so that they cannot afterwards be found. This is true, but the plaintiff in such a case may have a copias in withernam, by which the sheriff may take other goods of the defendant in lieu of the distress eloigned and withheld from the plaintiff, and the goods then taken in withernam cannot be replevied until the original distress is returned. (6 Bac. Replev. E. 2. Sell. 155.) The only hazard, then, which the plaintiff incurs is, that the defendant may have no property which can be taken in lieu of the distress. But this is a risk which every party runs who sets up a claim to property in the hands of a third person. The plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s rejoinder to the replication to the 2d plea to the first count is therefore well taken, and he is entitled to judgment thereon.

The same questions, in substance, are presented by the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication to the 7th plea to the first count. This, however, is a special demurrer, and involves some questions of form in addition to the material question which we have been considering. The 7th plea, after stating the plaint and proceedings in replevin, avers that in pursuance thereof, at the time and place mentioned in the said count, the said defendant, as sheriff, &c, seized, took and carried away the said goods and chattels in the said first count mentioned, as he lawfully might do. The plaintiff replies that he ought not to be precluded, because he saith that he, the said plaintiff, before and at the same time when in the said first count mentioned, did claim the full and entire property in the said goods and chattels in the said 7th plea mentioned, &c. whereof the said David Pierson, sheriff, &c. then and there had due notice, and this he is ready to verify, &c.

To this replication the defendant demurs specially; and I am inclined to think that some of the special causes assign*351eci are well founded. The plaintiff must shew that he was dispossessed of the goods and chattels, &c. after claim of property was made, and notice thereof given to the defendant. The defendant, in his rejoinder to the plaintiff’s replication to the 2d plea, expressly avers, that after the plaintiff claimed the said goods and chattels, he carried them away • safely, and securely put and placed them in an adjoining building. Upon the "demurrer to that rejoinder, therefore, the fact of taking away after claim and notice was admitted. But the plaintiff’s replication to the 7th plea does not state with precision when the claim of property was made and notice thereof given to the defendant. The only designation of the time, is the time mentioned in the first count of the declaration ; and there is no averment that the taking and carrying away complained of was after such claim and notice.

This, I think, is too vague. The material point in the issue is the fact of claim and notice before deliverance, and the plaintiff ought to designate the time, so that the defendant can take issue directly upon it. The time is in this case material. It ought to appear distinctly that the defendant, after claim and notice, proceeded to make deliverance and dispossess the plaintiff. In this respect, the replication to the 7th plea is defective upon special demurrer, and the defendant is entitled to judgment, with leave to the plaintiff to amend on payment of costs.

Judgment for plaintiff, on demurrer to the defendant’s rejoinder to the replication to the 2d plea.

Judgment for defendant, on special demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication to the 7th plea, with leave to the plaintiff to amend, on payment of costs.