16 Wend. 562 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1837
The attachments and executions under which the parties claim are but a series of nullities, 2 R. S. 162, § 27, 28; id. 273, § 271; Act of April 26, 1831, to abolish imprisonment, § 35; Smith v. Luce, 14 Wendell, 237; 2 R. S. 202, § 294, 2d ed.; Sess. Laws, 1831, p. 404, § 35; Adkins v. Brewer, 3 Cowen, 206, 208, 9, and the cases there cited; and neither they nor any levy under them created any right of action in favor of the plaintiff, nor defence for the other side. No actual possession taken by the plaintiff, independent of the attachments, was shown or relied on by him. He seems to have rested his title on his own return upon void process. If there were any actual possession in either party, it was rather on the side of the defendants, who are found not merely making a formal levy, but following it out by a sale; and that, too, in case of the horse by the actual consent of the plaintiff himself. In respect to this article at least, there seems to be any thing but a trespass.
But the rule is one of protection merely; and beyond that is not meant to confer any right. The armor which
I am aware, all this time, that the case might have been differed, by showing an actual prior possession in the plaintiff; and it is insisted that his own return, stating that he had attached the goods and taken them into his custody and possession, made out such a case. That was prima facie evidence of a levy, according to Cornell v. Cook, 7 Cowen’s R. 313, and Spoor v. Holland, 8 Wendell, 445. The language of the return may be satisfied by the legal or actual custody and possession. Which it was, the return does not show. But admitting that it was sufficient to prove the actual possession as against these defendants, who were strangers, their judgment being void, the plaintiff then made out a prima facie case, according to Spoor v. Holland and the previous cases of Barker v. Knapp, 6 Johns. R. 195, and Blakeley v. Sheldon, 7 id. 32, 33. These cases hold that, as against a stranger who takes the goods, the execution levied and possession taken, without showing the judgment, will maintain the action. But when we go farther
I am clear the plaintiff had no legal rights upon which he could maintain an action against any body. But if he had valid process, what were his rights ? We have seen upon authority that he was a special property-man. Holding such a property, he gave up the horse to the defendants voluntarily, and yet was allowed to recover the value thereof, as taken by an act of trespass, tit was held in Marshall v. Davis, 1 Wendell, 109, that trespass would not lie by the general owner whose property was taken with the consent of the bailee.^ That, too, was the case of a bailment with the right to resume possession whenever the bailor pleased. Here was, as yet, no legal right whatever in the plaintiffs in the attachments, even if we admit them to have been valid. Earl, the present plaintiff, was the bailee, and Post the general owner. Gould, J. in Clerk v. Withers, 6 Mod. 298, speaking of Wilbraham v. Snow, remarks,- “ Kelynge, C. J., held that he [the sheriff who levies afi.fa.] gains a general property ; but all the rest say it was a special property so as to sell, &c.” It is scarcely necessary to observe, that if the assent of the bailee will protect the taker against trespass by the general owner, it is fatal to such an action brought in his own name. See per Woodworth, J. in Daniels v. Ball, 11 Wendell, 57; S. P. note. If he was a mere agent or servant, as the learned judge held him to be at the trial, while I agree that in such case his consent without a special authority for the purpose, would not prevent trespass by his principal, yet I cannot see, even in such case, why it should not conclude the agent or servant himself against an action of trespass or any other action. It was a voluntary relinquishment of all his rights at least, with a full knowledge that the defendants intended to appropriate the property to their own use. I think it a much stronger case than
It is not necessary to pass upon the questions whether the goods being under a previous mortgage by Post, and some of the articles being exempt from the attachments, Were facts receivable in mitigation of damages. I will only remark, that this right to show property in a third person, by way of defeating the action of a naked possessor, was thought to be peculiar to a defence in trover, till Duncan v. Spear, 11 Wendell, 54; and see Daniels v. Ball, id. 57, note. By these cases it was denied even in trover, though agreed to be admissible if the defendant would connect himself with the outstanding title. In Spoor v. Holland, 8 Wendell, 445, to which we have been referred, the defendant was allowed to do the same thing in mitigation of damages. The cases do not go farther than this even in trover ; and the defendant in trespass was always holden to equal if not greater strictness. The defendants, to bring themselves within the latter case, should have proved that they were the assignees of the mortgage, or had a claim under it in some other way.
The cases cited seem equally an answer to the objection that a part of the property seized was exempt from execution. The right of the debtor in this case is to be regarded as that of a third person; for even though the property be sold and applied to the execution against him, he may yet prosecute his action and recover the full value. Hill v. Loomis, 6 N. Hamp. R. 263. But it lies with him alone to make the objection, and seek his remedy in his own time and his own way. Even his bailee could not sue or defend himself on that ground. The right to enforce the exemption is personal to himself. All this was held in Mickles v. Tousley, 1 Cowen, 114.
Upon the two questions as to the damages, it appears to me the judge was clearly right; but having, as we think, erred upon the questions of title, there must be a new trial, the costs to abide the event.