35 Vt. 419 | Vt. | 1862
In this case, which is an action on the case against the defendant, as sheriff of Windsor county, for a false return of service of a process of foreclosure in chancery, in which the plaintiff in this suit was one of the defendants, the question is, first, whether, upon the facts stated in the exceptions, the return is in fact false, and if so, then secondly, whether it is false in a particular operating to the injury of the plaintiff in this action, and resulting in such damages to him as will sustain an action.
The bill of foreclosure was in favor of Edmund Weston, and returnable to the Orange County Court of Chancery, June Term, 1860. Smith and Olds and one Manchester were co-defendants with Davis, the plaintiff in this suit. All the defendants in that process resided in Windsor county, except Davis, who resided in Cornish, in the state of New Hampshire. The premises, sought to be foreclosed by that bill, were situate in Hartford, in Windsor county, and were in possession of said Manchester, as tenant of Davis, the plaintiff in this suit, Davis having an equity of redemption in the premises, by virtue of a levy of an execution subsequent to the mortgage above mentioned, and subsequent to two other mortgages, one to said Smith and one to said Olds. The bill and subpeena in chancery appear by the case to have been regularly served by this defendant Richmond on all the defendants therein, except Davis, in Windsor county ; and, as to Davis, the case shows that the only service that was made on him was by a true and attested copy of the bill and subpeena left by the defendant Richmond at Davis’ dwelling house in Cornish, New Hampshire, on the 14th day of June, 1860. There is no pretence but that the service on Davis was seasonable, and. the return true in respect to the time when it was made.
The first question is whether the service on Davis in New Hampshire was valid — whether the sheriff could make a legal or valid service out of this slate. It is very clear that the sheriff had no official character and no authority as sheriff under that process in New Hampshire, and that the service made by him tliere was, as an official act, unauthorized and void. .It is. true he was sheriff at home in his own state, but in New Hampshire he was no more than any private person, and the leaving of the
But it is insisted by the defendant’s counsel that whether the service was legal or not, is immaterial; that the question is whether the return is true, and that the plaintiff can not recover unless he shows that the return is false in fact. It is true the action is not for making an illegal or defective return, hut for making a false return, and the plaintiff can not recover unless
The next question is, whether the return is false in this particular. This involves the construction of the return as made upon the process and returned to tfie court. The return commences : “ State of Vermont, Windsor county ss. At Hartford, in said county, on the 13th day of June, 1860, I made service of this petition and subpoena on the within John Smith, by leaving a true and attested copy,” &c. — then proceeding in usual form, it then states that on the same day, at said Hartford, he made service on the within named Denison Manchester by delivering to him a true and attested copy thereof, with his return thereon endorsed. It then states that on the same day, in Norwich, in said county, he made service on F. L. & E. W. Olds, by delivering each of them a true and attested copy, with this return endorsed on each of said copies. Then follow these words — “On the 14th day of June aforesaid, I delivered to the within named Reuben Davis a true and 'attested copy of this petition and subpoena, with my return thereon endorsed.”
If the legal construction and intendment of this return is that, as to the service on Davis, it is to be referred to no place as there made, then the return is not false in the particular
If, then, the plaintiff in this case has suffered any damage by this error in the return, he is entitled to recover. It appears that a decree was taken against this plaintiff and the other defendants in that cause, at the June Term, 1860, the term at which the process was returnable. Thus the defendant, by reason of this error in the return, had a decree against him at least one term sooner than a decree could have been obtained, had the sheriff returned truly the place where service was made, as in that case the only way to have obtained a decree against Davis in that suit, would have been by a continuance of the cause to the next term, and by a notification by publication for the usual length' of time to Davis, under an order of court. This of itself shows sufficient damage to sustain the action. It differs in no way from the common case of an officer making
It is claimed by the defendant’s counsel that the amount of the mortgages on the premises, which constituted a lien prior to' Davis’ levy, was more than the value of the premises. Whether this is so or not does not necessarily appear, as the appraisal-made at the time of the plaintiff’s levy is not conclusive of the value at the date of the decree, but if the fact is as the defen-' dant’s counsel claim, it may affect the amount of the recovery, but can not defeat the action.
The judgment of the county court is reversed, and the case’ remanded.