McDonald v. Lewis

The judgment of the court (Eusiis, C, 3. dissenting,) was pronounced by

Slidell, J.

The court below was of opinion that the plaintiff had proved a bond.fide purchase of the goods from Tillotson. I do not feel entirely convinced upon that point; but I will give the plaintiff the benefit of the district judge’s opinion, and assume that the sale was real and in good faith. But what are the facts so far as the sheriff is concerned?

This sale, it is said, was made on the 16th February, 1847, upon which day the written bill of sale purports to be signed. Tillotson, the vendor, an embarrassed debtor, remains in'the shop, acting as salesmau, down to the timo off the seizure. The sheriff’s deputy goes, on the 9th April, 1847, to the shop, finds Tillotson there, and demands payunent of the amount of the' execution. ,- Tillotson tells him he cannot pay. The officer replies, then I must seize the goods' hero. Tillotson answers, they are not mine. The officer retires, and in a little while' returns, and threatens again to seize. At this second visit McDonald comes into the-shop, wllilo the officer is parleying with Tillotson. They both tell him Tillotson has sold the goods to McDonald. But all the surrounding circumstances contradict the naked assertion of the parties. Tillotson’s sign is still on the on the outside of the shop. The boxes and packages are marked with his name, either in full or by his initials. McDonald’s name appears no where. The attorney of the plaintiff in execution insists that the alleged salo is a mere pretence, and that the officer should proceed. The plaintiff, not exhibiting hi3 bill of sale nor his books, and proffering nothing but his naked assertion, tire officer seizes the goods and takes them away, and then this action is brought. The plaintiff’s title is produced for the first time on the trial of the cause, and then the sheriff brings the good3 into court, and says he is ready to deliver them immediately if the court should so direct.

It seems to me, if we hold the sheriff liable in this case as a trespasser, when he was willing to restore the goods, it would bo a great hardship upon the public officer, and would be in reality enabling a party to take advantage of his own wrong. The plaintiff, oven if he was a real purchaser, acted in such a way as to deceive the public, and this deliberately and for his own supposed interest. When Tillotson’s clerk was about leaving the shop, shortly after the sale, he asked McDonald whether he was to erase Tillotson’s name from over the door. McDonald replied, “that he would let it remain; that itwould be of some advantage to him.” It seems to me, such a course of conduct should be discouraged. It holds out tho vendor in a false light to the public, and gives him a false credit. In the caso before us, it led the public officer into an error, tho consequences of which the plaintiff now seeks to impose upon him.

I think the plaintiff was bound, in good conscience, to give the officer something more than his naked assertion, thus violently opposed by all the surrounding appearances. Why was not the bill of sale shown, and the plaintiff’s books, upon which he now relies?

Tho postion of a sheriff is one of great responsibility. If he refuses to make a levy, and the plaintiff in the suit can show that the goods found in the possession of the defendant in the execution were in truth his property, he is entitled *203to recover his debt pro tanto from the sheriff. And it seems that, in an action against the sheriff for a false return of nulla bona, it is sufficient to put the sheriff on his defence, for the plaintiff to show that the defendant in execution was in possession of property sufficient to satisfy the execution. Magne v. Lyman, 5 Wendell, 311. Ido not find any textual provision in outlaws, authorizing a sheriff to demand a bond of indemnity, and I have doubts whether he has a legal right to do so. If, on the other hand, he is to be held liable, as a wrong doer, for taking property which the owner has permitted to be surrounded by deceitful appearances, which entrap tho sheriff, his double responsibility becomes grievous to a degree that appears to me unreasonable. I think very great weight is to be given to what was said in an argument by counsel, respecting what is properly characterized by the chief justice as a defect in our jurisprudence. At common law, when the sheriff is mot by the assertion of an adverse title, he may impanel a jury to enquire in whom the property is vested; and their return will excuse him in an action of trespass. Bacon’s Abridg. verbo sheriff. Bailey v. Bates, 8 Johnson, 143. With us a sheriff' has no such power, and ought not to be held •with the same severity to a party whose conduct was imprudent and well calculated to deceive the officer.

If this case were tested by the rules and principles of the common law, which ■has been invoked in argument by the plaintiff’s counsel, I incline'to the opinion ■that tho sheriff would be permitted to return the goods upon payment of costs and mere nominal damages. I question if the action of trespass would lie in such a case; for, to sustain that action, it seems the the taking must be unjustifiable. Hence it is declared by respectable authority, that if a sheriff' take the goods of A. under a writ of fieri facias after he has committed an act of bankruptcy, and afterwards the goods are assigned under a commission of bankruptcy, an action of trespass does not lie against the officer,-although tho goods do by relation become tho property of the assignees from the time of committing the act; for as the officer might not know that A. had committed an act of bankruptcy, or that an assignment of the goods would be made, and as it was his duty to execute the writ, it would be unreasonable to punish him as a wrong doer. Bacon’s Abridg. Trespass. -So if A. mix his corn or money, with the corn or money of B., so that they cannot be distinguished, and B. take the whole, trespass does not lie, as there was a fault on the part of A. Ib. And so I should think a party would not be entitled to bring an action of trespass against the sheriff', who had loft his goods iu the possession of -the defendant in execution in such manner as to give him all the appearance of ownership.

Then if the taking was not tmjustifiable, the plaintiff would be driven to an action of trover; and I find it asserted by the same author that, in some cases, in that action it is allowed to bring the thing into court. “Butherein”, he remarks, “this distinction is to be observed; if trover is brought for a specific chattio of an unascertained quantity and quality, and unattended with any'circumstances that may enhance the damages beyond the real value, but its real and ascertained value must be the solo measure of damages, then the specific thing demanded may be brought into court. But where there is an uncertainty cither as to the quantity or quality of tho thing demanded, or thoro is any tort accompanying it that may enhance the damage above the real valuó of tho thing, and there is no rule whereby to estimate the additional value, then it shall not be brought info court.” So in Brown on Action, it is said: “If tho defendant return tho goods, the plaintiff will only recover such damages as he has actually sustained; buthe' is at all events entitled to nominal damages, as the return of the goods does not *204cure the conversion, but merely goes in mitigation of damages; and if there be a dispute as to the quantity of the goods converted, and the plaintiff refuses to receive back tho portion offered, the court will, upon application for the purpose, stay the proceedings, on delivery of such portion of tho goods and payment of costs and damages; and if the plaintiff refuse to accept such terms, will permit tho defendant to deliver up tho goods, the plaintiff to pay tho costs incurred subsequently to such delivery, in the event of his not recovering in respect of some otliór articles than those delivered up, or more than nominal damages in respect of those delivered up.” Brown on Actions, Trover, p. 425.

The power of our courts cannot be less than those of common law, to mould the remedy to tho justice of tho case.

To these remarks I may add, that I am not prepared to say that there was such a legal change of possession as would perfect tho salo against creditors, oven supposing the sale to be real and bond jldc. See Hoffman v. Clarke, 5 Wheaton, 549. In that case, which was trespass, against a constable, for taking ahorse alleged to belong to the plaintiff, by virtue of an execution against A., the plaintiíF’s brother, it appeared in evidence thatthe horse had belonged to A., who testified that ho had sold him to the plaintiff, before the-execution, for a full price. Another witness produced by the plaintiff testified that the plaintiff and A. lived together, and that after the sale the plaintiff kept the horse in tho same stable in which A. had kept him. The court then said, the law in order make sales of personal property good against creditors, and to prevent their being deceived by appearances, requires that there shall bo an actual transfer of the possession, so far as the nature and condition of tho property will admit of it. The circumstance of the seller and buyer of the horse boarding together in the same house, furnishes no ground for dispensing with such actual chango of the possession as will render it distinct and visible, so that it may become notorious. It was surely practicable for the plaintiff to have taken possession of lhc horse, by placing him in a different stable, and either feeding and taking care of him himself, or to have procured some third person to have done so. So here, the plaintiff' might have changed the sign, &c.

Host, J. and King, J. were also of opinion that the judgment should be .affirmed.