15 A. 69 | R.I. | 1888
This is an action of trover for the conversion of certain goods and chattels, to which the plaintiffs claim title as administrators, with the will annexed, on the estate of Henry M. Barber, late of Westerly, deceased.
At the trial the plaintiff produced as a witness Edward G. Cundall, who testified that on February 26, 1887, he was sheriff of Washington County; that on that date, before the service of the writ in this suit, but having the writ with him, he demanded from the defendants, in behalf of the plaintiffs, all of the property *267 named in the writ, except the bay horse. The plaintiffs offered to prove by this witness that the defendants, at the time of the demand and before service of the writ, refused to deliver the property in compliance with the demand, but the court excluded the testimony and the plaintiffs excepted. They now petition for a new trial, on the ground that the exclusion of the testimony was erroneous.
That the plaintiff must have a right of action at the commencement of the suit, to entitle him to recover, is a proposition too well established to be questioned. Assuming, therefore, for the purpose of the present inquiry, that there was no other evidence of a conversion, so that proof of a demand and refusal was essential to make out a conversion, the question which arises is, were the demand testified to by the witness, and the refusal to comply with it, which the plaintiffs offered to prove by his testimony, prior to the commencement of the suit. What is the commencement of a suit is a matter about which courts have differed. In Connecticut it is held that it is the service of the writ which is the commencement of the suit. Clark v.Helms, 1 Root, 487; Jencks v. Phelps,
Since, then, this intention to have the writ served is an essential element to the commencement of a suit, it follows that, where there is no present, immediate intention that the writ shall be served, though the writ be in the possession of the officer, but only an intention that service of it shall be made at some future time, or upon the happening of some future event, the suit is not commenced till such time arrives or such event happens. Accordingly, in Badger v. Phinney,
The case at bar would be identical in principle with Badger
v. Phinney,
Petition granted.