103 Mass. 454 | Mass. | 1869
The fifty-first section of chapter 415 of the acts of 1869 provides that, “at the time and place designated in the notice, the person complained against, or any person claiming an interest in the liquor or vessels seized, or any part thereof, may appear and make his claim verbally or in writing, and a record of his appearance and claim shall be made, and he shall be admitted as a party in the trial. Whether a claim as aforesaid is made or not, the justice or court shall proceed to try, hear and determine the allegations of such complaint, and whether such liquors and vessels, or any part thereof, are forfeited. If it appears that the liquor or any part thereof was, at the time of making the complaint, owned or kept by the person alleged therein, for the purpose of being sold in violation of this act, the court'Ar justice shall render judgment that such and so
These enactments appear to be designed to make provision for two alternatives; one, where it is shown that the liquors seized are liable to forfeiture; the other, where it is not so shown. We are of opinion that the fifty-third section was intended to apply to cases like the one at bar, in which the proceedings are quashed by reason of formal defects in the complaint, or other irregularities not affecting the jurisdiction of the court, as well as to cases in which, upon the trial of an issue of fact, there is a failure to prove that the liquors seized are liable to forfeiture. The language admits of this construction; and, thus construed, the statute makes provision, in all cases properly before the court, for the disposition of the property, which by the service of the search warrant is placed in the custody of the law and the control of the court; while the opposite construction leaves the disposition of the property entirely unprovided for in a large class of cases constantly arising in the practical administration of the lawi Unless the court orders a return, the only remedy of the owner is a suit against the officer, and it is not to be presumed that the legislature intended a result so vexatious both to the owner and to the officer having the custody of the property. All the reasons, of justice and of policy, in favor of issuing such order in any case, apply with equal force to cases like the present. It would have a tendency
The decision of this court in Ewings v. Walker, 9 Gray, 95, does not conflict with these views. In that case, the notice issued by the police court was not returned to the court of common pleas, so that the latter court acquired no jurisdiction of the case, and the complaint was therefore abated, and no order for a return issued. In that state of facts, the plaintiff demanded his property of the officer having the custody of it, who refused to deliver it up ; and the court held that the owner could maintain tort for its conversion. The question was not raised whether, in a case like the one at bar, it was the duty of the court to issue an order for a return. The remarks in the opinion, as to the provisions in relation to an order for the return of liquors, if they can be construed so as to include this case, have not the weight of an adjudication, as the question was not involved in the decision of that case. Exceptions sustained.