30 Vt. 208 | Vt. | 1858
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In this case the jury must have found that the attorney for the plaintiff directed the defendant to return that he had attached a car, but that he need not take it into his possession, and that he should not be liable on account of it in any way, and that the sheriff, in consequence of this direction, made his return accordingly and neglected to take possession of the car.
It is manifest that under this state of facts, it would be the grossest injustice to hold the officer liable to the plaintiff for not keeping the car to satisfy the plaintiff’s judgment when obtained. No principle is better settled in this state than the one that when a creditor interferes with an officer, and by direction induces him to depart from the regular course of his official duty, he cannot afterwards turn round upon the officer and make him liable in damages for not following the direction of the law in his proceedings. The principle has been carried in many cases to the extent that when the officer was induced, by the control and direction of the party, to depart from the regular line of his official duty, he became but the private agent of the party and could not be held liable officially, even though he departed from his principal’s instructions. Many of the cases cited in the argument are of this character.
But the plaintiff insists that the evidence to prove the directions to the officer in this case was inadmissible, upon the ground that
The general principle that the return of an officer upon legal process is conclusive upon the parties to the process and also upon himself, is too well settled everywhere to admit of doubt or debate, and is founded upon such sound reason as to allow of no desire to depart from it. To this rule, as to almost all other general rules of law, there are many exceptions, as will appear by reference to the cases cited at the bar.
But in the present case we find no occasion to enter into any discussion of the learning in relation either to the general rule or the exceptions to it, as we think the evidence received in this case was no violation of the general rule, and no necessity arises to shelter its admissibility under any of the exceptions to it. The officer was directed to make a return of the attachment of a car, and he did so, and his return is in entire harmony with the direction. He was directed not to take possession of the car but to leave it in the possession of the debtor, and he followed the direction. This, we think, is in no manner a contradiction of his return any more than if he had at first taken possession of the car, and had at some subsequent day, by the direction of the plaintiff, surrendered it to the possession of the debtor. It is conceded that such a direction and surrender of the property would be no contradiction of the return, and would be a full defense to the officer in a suit for not keeping the property.
The case of Ordway v. Bacon, 14 Vt. 378, goes quite beyond what we are called upon to decide in the present case. It was there decided that “ In an action against a sheriff for the default of his deputy in not taking bail and for making a false return, in a suit where the deputy returned that he had taken good and sufficient hail, but no person’s name was indorsed on the writ as bail, in such case the deputy, having been duly released by the sheriff, was a competent witness to prove that when the writ was delivered to him for service, the plaintiff directed him not to take bail, and that such a direction was a bar to the action.” We think there was no error in the direction of the county court to the jury, that the facts found constituted a good defense to the plaintiff’s claim on the defendant for not keeping the car attached on the writ.
We are equally satisfied with the correctness of the ruling of the county court upon this part of the case, and the judgment below is therefore affirmed.