37 Vt. 475 | Vt. | 1865
The defendant as deputy sheriff attached several tubs of butter and several boxes of cheese then in the freight depot at Milton, on a writ against the plaintiff, and left the property so attached, in said depot in the care of the station agent. The plaintiff settled the debt upon which the attachment was made, and the attachment was thereby ended. Upon going to the depot and calling for the butter and cheese so attached, the plaintiff found that one tub of the butter was missing; and both parties seem to have conpeded that it had been stolen from the depot.
The plaintiff demanded the missing tub of butter of the defendant, ■but he was unable to .deliver it, as it was out of his power to do so. The plgintiff plaimed that the defendant was liable tp pay for the lost
This finding gives the plaintiff a right of action to recover for the butter, but the important question in the case is, whether it gives Mm an action against the defendant, or against his principal, the sheriff.
The statute, § 24, chap. 12, provides that “ suits for any official misfeasance or neglect of a deputy sheriff, or for any cause affecting his administration of the office of sheriff shall be* sustained- only against the sheriff by whom he was appointed,” «fee.
That this negligence of the deputy in keeping property attached by him, is such an official default, that the sheriff might be sued and made liable therefor admits of no question, but the plaintiff claims that an action will also lie directly against the deputy.
It is doubtless true that there are cases where either may be sued, when the deputy in the course of his official conduct has been guilty of some positive and active tortious act. But can the deputy be sued when the complaint against him is for mere negligence, strictly a non feasance ?
In the case of Hutchinson v. Parkhurst, 1 Aik. 258, it is said by Skinner, Ch. J.: “ In England no action for neglect of duty- will lie against a deputy sheriff though such officer is liable for a tort committed by him. The distinction is that for misfeasance the deputy is liable as well as the sheriff; but for non feasance, the action must be against the sheriff. In the opinion of Lord Hale in Salk. 18, this distinction is clearly marked; he says the deputy is not chargeable as an officer, but as a wrong doer, that for a voluntary escape an action lies against the deputy, for it is in the nature of a rescue;. but for a negligent escape the action lies only against the sheriff.” And that case goes on to decide that under our statute the respective liabilities of the sheriff and his deputies are the same as held in the English law. In Abbott v. Kimball et al., 19 Vt. 551, where a deputy sheriff had attached the plaintiff’s harnesses, and had not kept them properly, whereby they had become injured, it was held that for such injury the plaintiff’s remedy was against the sheriff,
And the same general doctrine is laid down in Hale v. Huntley et al., 21 Vt. 147, and is the language of all our cases on the subject. In the present, case, it was not claimed that the defendant had committed any tortious, act,. or been guilty of any positive wrong, but only.that in the course, of his duty as an officer in keeping attached property, he had omitted to put it in a safe and suitable place, an omission of duty,, a non feasance, in the strictest sense.
Now whether such a negligence can be treated as a conversion, so that if the defendant had been sheriff, instead of sheriff’s deputy, trover could have been maintained we have no occasion now to decide but we regard it as clear under our statute and decisions, that no action whatever will lie against the deputy upon the facts proved in this.case.
But the plaintiff claims that the refusal of the defendant to deliver the missing tub .of butter to him when he demanded it, was a conversion. If the defendant had the butter then in his possession, and wilfully withheld it from the plaintiff, it would doubtless have been such a .tortious act as would have made him liable, but as it was, the defendant’s refusal to deliver it was neither a conversion, nor evidence of a conversion. There was no wrong in not delivering the butter, to .the plaintiff on his demand, for it was not in his possession or. power to deliver, and this the plaintiff well .knew and the reason why. . It therefore added .nothing to his liability:. that depended wholly upon the manner in which the butter had got out of his possession and power .to deliver. These views of the effect of a demand and refusal, when the party, upon whom the demand is made •has. not,the demanded property in his possession or under his control at.the time, are fully, supported by the case, of Rice v. Clark, 8 Vt. 109.
.Judgment reversed and ease remanded.