Paine v. Farr

Endicott, J.

Where an officer attempts to justify the seizure of property under mesne process, he must show that he made return of his writj and did all that the law requires of him to do. If he fails n this duty he is a trespasser. Tubbs v. Tukey, 3 Cush. 438. Kent v. Willey, 11 Gray, 368, 373. But there are *76exceptions to this rule, as when a settlement is made by the parties, and the property restored with an agreement that the writ need not be returned. Williams v. Babbitt, 14 Gray, 141, 142. And when property attached is surrendered at the request of the defendant, and money substituted therefor as an equivalent, no action will lie against the officer for the original attachment, although the writ is not returned. Taylor v. Knowlton, 10 Allen, 137.

The defendant, an officer qualified to serve civil process, attached certain property in a house on Dover Street, on a suit in favor of Sheafe against John D. Paine and his wife, the present plaintiff. The property was attached as their property, and a keeper placed in the house. The attachment was afterwards released, but the writ was not returned into court. It was competent for the defendant to prove, in justification of his seizure of the property, that a settlement was made by the parties by which the property was to be restored and the writ not returned.

There had been evidence introduced showing the peculiar relations existing between Paine and his wife in regard to the business carried on in this house. She carried on business as a boarding-house keeper, and contended that the property attached belonged to her. The house was hired and the rent paid by him, his name was on the door, and he and their child received their board from the plaintiff for the use of the house. There was also evidence that a large part of the provisions used in the business was charged to and paid for by him, either by his own labor or by cash. Both testified that he was paid by her the moneys expended by him. Whether he was acting in this business merely as her agent, as contended by her, was in controversy at the trial.

To prove the settlement, the defendant offered a notice from the husband directing him to remove any property rightfully attached, and to take away the keeper, and, failing to do so, he should eject the keeper; that, in consequence of the notice, an interview was had with the husband, the wife being at the time confined to her chamber and unable to attend to business, and with the consent of Sheafe a settlement was effected, the keeper was withdrawn, the property restored, with the agreement that *77the writ need not be returned into court. The husband and wife were joint defendants, and the wife, if interested in the property, received the benefit resulting from the release.

Taking into consideration all the circumstances of the case,- the fact that the parties were husband and wife, the nature of the action, the condition of the wife at the time, and the relations existing between them in regard to the carrying on of the business, and the use of the property employed therein, we are of opinion that the evidence offered was competent, and it was for the jury to determine whether the husband was acting for the wife as well as for himself in making this settlement in relation to the property employed in the business, and in connection with which he had on other occasions, by her own admission, acted as her agent.

It is also contended by the defendant, that, even if the husband did not act for her as her agent in the settlement, it was competent, in mitigation of damages, to prove that the entry into the house and the taking of the property were under a writ. The first count is for an assault upon the plaintiff, at the time of the unlawful entry, by pushing her and with force entering her chamber, and alleging that in consequence of the unlawful entry,, removal and detention of the goods, destruction of her - business, and the assault, she became very sick and suffered in body and mind. The motives and circumstances attending an assault, tending to show malice and intent, may be put in evidence, as an aggravation of the sufferings of the party assaulted. Sampson v. Henry, 11 Pick. 379. While, therefore, the defendant cannot justify, and make his entry lawful, if he fails to show a return of his writ or a settlement and an agreement that he need not return it, he may, to rebut the presumption that he entered with a purpose wantonly to insult and to injure the feelings of the plaintiff, show that he entered for the purpose and did in fact make an attachment. To this extent, and in mitigation of damages only, the evidence was competent. In Sampson v. Henry, it was held that the circumstance that the defendant entered for the purpose of making an attachment ought not to go in mitigation of damages; but the decision was put on the express ground that the defend-, ant had no legal right to break open a dwelling-house for that purpose, which was in itself an abuse of legal process. In this *78case, no such abuse of process in making the entry appears; the entry only became unlawful because a return was not made, and the circumstances of the entry, as beáring on the intent to do injury to the plaintiff’s feelings, may be put in evidence.

The question was not raised at the trial, or ruled upon by the court, whether the conduct of the husband, in making the settlement, was competent upon the question whether the wife carried on the business on her sole account, and the house and property therein were hers for that purpose. We have not therefore considered the argument presented on that point by the defendant.

Exceptions sustained.