By virtue of the seizure under the attachment, the property was in the custody of the law, the sheriff being the custodian. As a public officer, charged with the execution of legal process, he owed a duty to the plaintiff to safely and securely keep the property for the purpose of satisfying the judgment which the plaintiff recovered in the action in which the attachment issued. (Code of Civil Pro., §§ 681, 674, 708.) If the sheriff did not faithfully perform this duty, and by reason of any negligence on his part or on the part of any of his deputies the plaintiff has suffered damage, then the defendant is liable.
The nature and degree of a sheriff’s liability in case of loss or destruction of property seized and taken into his possession, by virtue of legal process, was determined in case of Moore v. Westervelt, Sheriff, etc. (27 N. Y., 234). It was there held that his liability is the same as that of bailees for hire, citing and approving of the rule as stated in Edwards on Bailments, 59, as follows: “ A sheriff levying upon goods, must use due diligence to keep them safely, to satisfy the execution. But he is not an insurer, and is not like a common carrier, answerable for a loss of the goods by .fire. His capacity as an officer is not considered as fixing a more rigorous measure of liability upon him than if he were a private person.”
, In the case cited, the property had been seized by the sheriff on a writ, of replevin and while in his custody was lost, having been sunk in the harbor of New York. In stating the rule of liability, the trial court instructed the jury: “ That it was.the duty of the sheriff to take such steps to insure the safety of the coal as a careful, prudent man of good sense and judgment, well acquainted with the condition of the vessel and her location, as regards exposure to storms and having all the power of the sheriff in the matter, might reasonably have been expected to take, had the coal belonged to himself; *357and if tbe jury came to the conclusion that the sheriff did not take that degree of care and preservation of the coal as he had thus indicated, and that the injury was occasioned by the negligence of the defendant or his officers, the plaintiff would be entitled to a verdict.”
The plaintiff thereupon asked the court to charge : “ That the sheriff was hound to take more than ordinary care of this property, and if for the want of more than ordinary care the property was lost, he was responsible.” The judge refused to charge this request.
These rulings were upheld as a correct statement of the law as to the duty and liability of a sheriff in such cases. The judgment of the court of last resort in this case puts an end to the contention, which has often been made, that the officer is an insurer of property in his hands by virtue of a levy under legal process, and is liable for its loss or destruction unless the same happened by the act of God or the public enemy.
The defendant insists that under the rule as now established, and upon the facts and circumstances of this case, it was a question of fact for the jury to determine whether he was guilty of any negligence or breach of duty in protecting the property in his custody, and it was error in withholding the question from their consideration.
If the real and only question in the case was whether the sheriff did all his duty in caring for the property and protecting his possession up to the time the constable succeeded in accomplishing his wrongful purpose, by removing the property on a claim of right by virtue of process in his hands, then very plainly a question of fact was presented for the' determination of the jury.
It may be conceded that up to the end of the contest over the possession, the sheriff acted with the greatest diligence, activity and propriety; that he summoned the bystanders to his assistance and they refused to aid him in retaining possession of the property and resisting the action of the constable. The sheriff’s duty, however, ■did not end on a capture of the goods by the stronger hand of the constable. The goods were not lost nor destroyed, and from the evidence it is fair to assume that they remained in the hands of the constable and within the sheriff’s bailiwick.
In all the eases where the sheriff’s liability has been tested by the *358rule, as already stated, and held exempt from the charge of negligence, there was a loss of the goods by theft, robbery, burglary, or by the action of the elements. It was so in the case of Moore v. Westervelt (supra). In Jenner v. Joliffe (6 Johns., 9), the loss occurred in consequence of a flood,'in the stream where the lumber was rafted. In Browning v. Hanford (5 Hill, 588), the goods were consumed by fire while in the sheriff’s possession. In other cases .where the question was up, the goods were lost by larceny or robbery, the felon escaping with the same.
After the sheriff was deprived of his possession, he remained passive and did no act whatever, with a view of regaining the custody of the property. Therein, he was guilty of a breach of duty, which constituted actionable negligence. As the goods were not destroyed and remained within his jurisdiction he had ample power and authority to regain thé possession. Although he had been deprived of the actual possession, the goods remained in the custody of the law and the levy under the attachment continued. It has never been held, by any court, as I can find, that a rescue of the property by a claimant, unless the claim was well founded, was a good and a sufficient return to a process in the hands of a sheriff. The sheriff had the power to raise thq posse aomitatus and reseize the property. He could have done it on the spot and gone in hot pursuit or acted with more deliberation and organized a force on a later day. No one can doubt if he had done this, that he would have regained the possession of the property. (Code of Civil Procedure, § 104; Browning v. Hanford, supra.) He could have prosecuted the constable in an action of replevin and by that means regained possession and had the property in his custody, so that he could have levied upon the same by virtue of the execution.
In Midway v. Smith (2 Saund., 343), it was stated by the court, that a return by a sheriff of a rescue is not a good and sufficient excuse on fi.fa. for a neglect to satisfy the execution out of the defendant’s goods.
The facts and circumstances, in all esential particulars, are similar to the case of Ansonia Brass and Copper Company v. Babbitt (74 N. Y., 395), where after a levy by the sheriff, the marshal in bankruptcy proceedings, took the goods from the sheriff’s possession without his consent and against his protest. He made no effort to regain *359tbe actual possession of tbe property, and it was neld by tbe court, that tbe seizure by tbe marshal constituted no defense for tbe sheriff, as the marshal acted without right or authority; that in no proper sense-had the sheriff yielded to a vis major; that he had the right to use all the necessary force to protect his possession, and having failed to do so was liable .to the plaintiff in the execution.
We are therefore of the opinion that, as a matter of law upon the undisputed facts, the sheriff was guilty of a breach of official duty, and liable to the plaintiff for the value of the goods. The defendant asked that it be submitted to the jury, to assess the value' of the goods levied upon, and this was refused by the court and the defendant excepted.
The inventory, as made by the sheriff and the appraisers selected by him, was given in evidence. The goods were itemized and the value placed on each article which, in the aggregate, amounted to $230.21. The plaintiff testified that the goods were of the value mentioned in the inventory. The defendant did not offer any proof on the question of value. This evidence prima facie established the value of the goods, and the jury would not have been justified in finding the value any less. As we read the attachment, the same was signed and allowed by the county judge, within the meaning of section 641 of the Code of Civil Procedure. As the debtor in the attachment proceedings did . not move to vacate the same, and the same stands in full force and effect, the process afforded the sheriff full and complete protection, as the facts stated in the affidavit tended to make out a case authorizing the same to issue. The amount of the inventory is $230.21, and as there is no evidence that the goods were of greater value, it' is manifest that the court was misled in stating the value to be $353, and directing' a verdict for that sum.
' On the plaintiff’s stipulating that the verdict may be reduced to $230.21, judgment is ordered thereon, with costs, if such stipulation is refused then a new trial is ordered, with costs to abide the event.
Smith, P. J., and HabdiN, J., concurred.So ordered.