35 Ky. 310 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1837
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
In the spring of 1824, a stranger, bringing with him two horses, stopped at the inn of John Brennan, in the city of Lexington, and became a guest of the inn for the night; in consequence of which, the two horses were received into the stable attached to it, and belonging to the innkeeper. The inn and stable being at that time crowded to overflowing, this unknown guest departed on the next day without particular notice, and, without the knowledge of Brennan, left one of .the two horses which, he had brought. On discovering this fact, diligent inquiry was made to ascertain who was the owner of the horse, and by whom he had been left. These inquiries proved unavailing until about the 24th of October, 1824, when Calvin Black claimed the horse
The foregoing facts having been admitted to be true, the Court in October, 1835, directed the horse to be delivered to a commissioner, and that he should be sold, and that out of the proceeds, the account for his keeping, amounting then to $78 86, should be paid to Brennan, &c. On the day after this decree, the commissioner reported that Black had sold the horse, in the spring of 1835: whereupon, a decree was rendered against Black for $78 86, and the costs of the suit: for the reversal of which, he prosecutes a writ of error.
It being the duty of an inn keeper to receive and provide for the horse of a traveller who becomes his guest, the law, in consideration of this duty, gives him
We are of opinion, therefore, that Brennan had a lien upon the horse in question, for his reasonable charges in keeping and feeding him; and there can be no doubt that a court of equity—having, in general, the jurisdiction to enforce liens and pledges of personal property—had jurisdiction to order a sale of the horse, for the payment of charges. But independently of the lien, the Chancellor had no jurisdiction of the case. And the suit to enforce the lien being purely a proceeding in rem, the jurisdiction over that suit, and to effectuate its objects, did not necessarily give or carry with it a right to go beyond the thing. If the horse had been taken to the inn, and left there by Black; and had been delivered and sold, according to the decretal order of the Court, and the proceeds of sale had been insufficient to satisfy the charges for his keeping, it might have
But as the horse was not taken to the inn by the defendant, or under his authority, but by a thief, and the defendant, had refused to take him away and pay charges, there was no ground, when the bill was filed, for raising even an assumpsit against him. And had the horse remained in Brennan’s possession, until the order of sale, his recovery would most obviously have been limited to the proceeds of the sale. He would have had, in that case, no personal demand, legal or equitable, against the owner, or any one else, but the individual who had left the horse with him, and thus impliedly promised to pay for his keeping.
The order made upon filing the bill, was nothing more than a disposition of the horse by the law, providing for his preservation and safe-keeping while m the custody of the law. It was not intended to have the effect of imposing any new obligation, or conferring any new right, upon either party, except such as was expressed in the order as being necessary for its purposes. The reception of the horse by the owner, under this order, was in fact an advantage to Brennan, as it relieved him from charges in keeping the horse, for which he had no prospect of remuneration beyond its value upon sale, and he was secured to the extent of that value by the bond of the owner to abide by the decree. The obligation entered into by the defendant to abide by the decree, certainly gave no right to pronounce a decree which would otherwise have been improper. It refers, of course, to the decree which might be pronounced with respect to the disposition of the horse. And if the decree, actually rendered on that subject, had been obeyed, by the delivery of the horse to the commissioner, the obligation would have been discharged. In taking the horse on the conditions proscribed by the Court, we do not suppose that Black
We are, therefore, of opinion, that the Court erred in decreeing the whole amount of the demand against Black, without regard to the value of the horse. It might have been proper, under the circumstances of this case, to have directed a sale as soon as the bill was filed, and to have held the proceeds subject to the final order of the Court. It certainly would have been proper to have had the horse valued when he was delivered to the owner; and, according to the view we have taken, the ascertainment of his value was necessary for the rendition of a final decree.
Therefore, for the error above noticed, the decree is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to ascertain the value of the horse at the time of his delivery to Black, and to render a decree against him for that value, together with the costs of suit.