2 Watts 61 | Pa. | 1833
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an issue directed by the court of common pleas of Adams county, for the purpose of trying whether the defendant, who was the sheriff of York county, was liable to the plaintiff for the amount of a capias ad satisfaciendum put into his hands for
The clauses upon which the plaintiff in error mainly relies, are those in the commencement of the assignment, and the clause in the deed where the assignor, after enumerating particular articles, proceeds to convey other articles of furniture, goods and chattels and effects, which he owned and possessed. “Other articles” is as strong an expression of intention, as if the grantor had conveyed “all other articles ;” for if a man grant omnia bona et cattalla sua, all his goods and chattels, real and personal, pass. 2 Roll. Abr. 58, l. 17. So if he grant bona sua, without saying omnia. 2 Roll. 58, l. 17. • Sir William Blackstone, in his Commentaries, second book, page 383, appears to consider that the term chattels comprehends all personal property, except what is denominated real estate. It is expressly so in the Norman Code, where it is put in opposition to a heritage or fief, which, according to us, is a real estate. The consequence of which, as deduced by the learned commentator, is, that in both laws a
Judgment reversed and a venire de novo awarded.