Purvis v. Breed

By the court:

SiiiDEin, J.

This is an attachment against Breed, upon a debt alleged to be due by him as a member of the firm of Hand and Breed. A motion was made to set aside the attachment, which was sustained by the district judge, and the plaintiffs have appealed.

The material facts are these. Breed formerly brought suit against Purvis, Wood Sf Co. for a sum of $1021, deposited with them for him. They filed a plea of compensation, alleging that Breed, as a member of the firm of Hand and Breed, was indebted to them in the sum of $1021, balance on account current. There was judgment in favor of Breed for the amount of the deposit. The plea of compensation was dismissed, on the ground that, to a demand of a deposit, such a plea was inadmissible. Purvis, Wood Sf Co. appealed, and the judgment was affirmed by this court, the case being considered as controlled by that equitable rule of our code, that “ the depositary cannot withhold the thing deposited, on pretence of a debt due to him from the depositor, on any account distinct from the deposit, or by way of offset.” Art. 2927.

Execution was then issued by Breed, against Purvis, Wood Sf Co., on that judgment, and they paid into the sheriff’s hands its amount in coin. On the next day, while the money was yet in the sheriff's hands, Purvis, Wood Sf Co. took out'the present attachment, their suit being founded on the same claim which they had unsuccessfully pleaded in compensation.

The spirit of the same rule which controlled the former cause, is, in our opinion, decisive of this. Why was the plea in compensation rejected? Because such a defence was repugnant to the nature of the contractunder which Purvis, Wood Sf Co. received the money for Breed. It was a contract of irregular deposit, to which, so far as our present inquiry is concerned, the equitable rules of the contract of deposit apply. This contract is one of confidence. It is considered, under all systems of jurisprudence, as imposing the duty of the most scrupulous good faith. Among the Romans, it was classed in the category of contracts bonce fidei. From its confidential character arose, with- them, the rule embodied in our code. In causa depositi compensationi locus non est. And so strictly was this principle carried out under that jurisprudence, from which our own is derived, that the depositary was not permitted to detain the thing deposited with him in compensation of what the depositor owedhim, even although it were another depositum; but each depositary was obliged promptly to restore the thing deposited with him. Q,uam eelerrime, sine aliquo obstáculo restituantur, was the stringent and uncompromising doctrine of the Roman law. The *638interpretation invoked at bar, which would restrict the depositor’s equity to a mere immunity from a plea of compensation, sacrifices the spirit of the law to a narrow consideration of its letter. But, in truth, the letter of the law is not so narrow as was suggested in argument. It imposes on the depositary the duty of instant return upon demand. Art. 2926. It forbids him to withhold that return on pretence of a debt due to him from the depositor on any account distinct from the deposit. Art. 2927. The form, then', in which the resistance to the right of the depositor comes, is immaterial. The spirit of the rule covers any substantial resistance. The deposit must be restored, sine aliquo obstáculo.

Here an obstacle is interposed by the depositary. He arrests the money with one hand which he proffers to pay with the other, and attempts to accomplish indirectly, what in the previous action he was not permitted to do directly. "We think the district judge did not err in dismissing the attachment. See also case of Lapeyre v. Orleans Ins. Co., 7 Ann.

We also concur in the opinion of the district judge as to the seizure in the case of Breed v. Hand.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.

Application for re-hearing refused.