16 Mass. 5 | Mass. | 1819
The first question in this case is, whether the replication shows a breach of the condition of the bond. The general stipulation of the obligors is, that Wood, the principal in the bond, should well and truly perform all the duties of the office of deputy-sheriff, in all respects according to law. The breach assigned is, substantially, that the said Wood, having attached certain chattels on a writ in favor of one Congdon against one Kennedy, which writ had been prosecuted in Court, and judgment recovered thereon, released and discharged the said chattels from attachment, within thirty days after the judgment so recovered.
Now, if this was in violation of his duty as a deputy-sheriff, it is a breach of the condition of the bond above specified; and that it was a violation of official duty admits of no question, when it is considered that the statute of 1784, c. 28. §>11. requires, in express terms, that all goods and chattels attached shall be kept during thir
It is said by the counsel for the defendants, that it does not appear in the replication, tint execution ever issued upon the judgment, or that it has not been satisfied, if it ever [ * 7 ] * did issue.—But this omission does not show that the condition of the bond has been performed, or that there has been no breach of it. For we do not see but that the sheriff would have a right to his action upon the bond, as soon as a breach of duty had taken place ; although no liability had been fixed upon him by inability to satisfy the execution. He ought to have opportunity to secure himself against the consequences of such breach of duty ; and whether execution ever issued or not, or was afterwards satisfied, would be matter of damages, to be ascertained upon a hearing in Chancery-.
The cases cited for the defendants, to show that actions cannot be maintained against sheriffs, until some damage has actually accrued
There being, then, a breach sufficiently averred, the question is, whether the rejoinder has legally avoided it. The fact averred, which is supposed to have this effect, is, that Wood, the deputy-sheriff, was at the place where the attachment was made during the thirty days after judgment, and that no notice was given to him that an execution had issued, nor any demand made of the goods and chattels attached, for the purpose of levying the execution upon them.
If the release of the attachment within the thirty days was a breach of official duty, and of the condition of the bond, it must be apparent that the mere fact of the goods not being demanded, or that no notice of the execution had been given to the officer, can be no excuse. It is a settled principle of law, that a demand, otherwise necessary, becomes useless and unnecessary, when the party, on whom it is to be made, has disabled himself from complying with it by his own fault
The counsel for the defendants has ingeniously availed himself, in his argument, of some decisions of the Court, on the effect of contracts made between attaching officers and debtors or their friends ; the purpose of which generally is to enable the debtor to keep possession of his goods notwithstanding the attachment. But we cannot perceive the applicability of those decisions to the case under consideration. It has often been remarked, that contracts of this nature have no effect upon the liability of the attaching officer to the creditor; unless he consent to the debtor or his friends’ keeping possession of the goods. Nor can such contracts have any effect upon the obligation given by the deputy-sheriff, if he be the attaching officer, to the sheriff.
It is true, it has been decided that the officer, who may have delivered over to the debtor the property attached, and taken a receipt therefor from a third person, can have no action upon such receipt if no execution have issued within thirty days after judgment; ana this because, in such case, he can have no right to the goods for any purpose, but to deliver them to the debtor, who already has them.
But where he has made strangers bailees, to whom the possession has been delivered, not for the purpose of delivering them over to the debtor, he would have a right of action, because the debtor would have a right to receive the goods of him, or an equivalent in damages, after the lawful lien had ceased. The case of Knap vs. Sprague
We are clear, therefore, that the rejoinder is not a sufficient avoidance of the replication ; and that being good for the reasons before stated, judgment must be rendered for the plaintiff, for the penalty of the bond. If it appear, on a hearing in Chancery, that the execution against Kennedy has been satisfied, or that the plaintiff has not been damnified, and cannot be, execution will be awarded for nominal damages only.
[Phillips vs. Bridge, 11 Mass. 242. —Tyler vs. Ulmer, 12 Mass. 163. —Ed.]
Bac. Abr. Title Escape in civil cases, D. —12 Mass. Rep. 127, Rice & Al. vs. Hosmer. —2 D. & E. 172, Atkinson vs. Matteson & Al. —5 D. & E. 37, Planck vs. Anderson & Al.
[Clark vs. Moody & Al. 17 Mass. 149. —Newcomb vs. Brackett, infra, 161 —Ed.]
12 Mass. Rep. 196.
9 Mass. Rep. 258.
[Jewett vs. Torrey, 11 Mass. 219. —Phillips & Al. vs. Bridge, 11 Mass. 242. —Lyman vs. Lyman, 11 Mass. 337. —See note to Knap vs. Sprague, 9 Mass. 258,3d ed. —It may be. conjectured from the argument of the Court, in giving judgment in the above case, that the goods which the officer had attached were afterwards by him suffered to be taken from his possession, and, either by being carried beyond the jurisdiction of the Court, or by some subsequent conveyance, or otherwise through his misfeasance oi