Fairchild v. Case

24 Wend. 380 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1840

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

1. All the questions of fact in this case, properly belonging to the jury, were submitted to and disposed of by them; and among these was the question of Gerlack’s non-residence and consequent liability to arrest and imprisonment.

2. If the form of declaring had entitled Gerlack to a discharge, he alone could take advantage of the slip—not the sheriff.

3. The statute concerning venues, and for more easy pleading in certain suits, 2 R. S. 277, 2d ed. § 28, 29, is in terms confined to acts [ *383 ] done by officers viriute officii; and *does not extend to mere nonfeasance, such as a negligent escape. Elliot v. Cronk’s adm’rs, 13 Wendell, 35. Hopkins v. Haywood, id. 265. The statute of limitations should therefore have been pleaded. Independently of the statute for more easy pleading, the form by which a sheriff or other officer must avail himself of the statute limiting actions for escapes, is the same as in other actions. Vid. 2 R. S. 224, 2d ed.

It was said the declaration is for a voluntary escape, which implies' a positive act of the sheriff. Without deciding whether he might, in such a case, avail himself of the limitation without plea, it is sufficient to say that the declaration was in effect also for a negligent escape. This may always be proved, and in fact was so here, under a count for a voluntary escape. *383Where two matters may be given in evidence under the same count, one requiring a defence to be pleaded and the other not, there can be no doubt that the defendant must plead, or he will lose his right of defence as to the former. It is by no means clear, however, that you are not obliged to plead the limitation in answer to a voluntary escape.

4. The question put and overruled, as to the means or manner of escape, . is not shown to have been relevant. It might have been answered by saying that the escape was effected by means and in a manner which took from the charge of negligence in the sheriff, without showing any real excuse, as that it was by the act of God, or the enemies of the country. The latter seem to be the only excuses as to manner and means which the sheriff can set up. He stands in this respect on the same ground with a common carrier. That may be seen by 1 Rolle’s Abr. tit. Escape, D. pl. 5, 6, 7, p. 808. It is said in several books, citing Rolle, that the sheriff would be excused by a sudden fire. But Rolle puts it on the ground that the fire is kindled by the act of God. In Green v. Hern, 2 Penn. R. 167, 169, Gibson, Ch. J. says, that according to the common law since the day of Rolle’s Abridgement, the jailer can avail. himself of nothing as matter of defence, but an act of God or the common enemy. The same rule was stated by him in Wheeler v. Hambright, 6 Serg. Rawle, 390, 396. *He there says the liability of a sheriff is, in this respect, [ *384 ] like that of a common carrier. See also Sleemaker v. Marriott, 5 Gill. & Johns. 406, 410. To warrant the quesion, counsel should at least have apprized the judge of his object, and shown that the means and manner inquired for were such as the sheriff might lawfully allege in his excuse.

5. It is not necessary, to say that common reputation as to the state of a man’s property, and whether he be solvent or not, should in all cases be excluded. In behalf of a prisoner indicted, and on trial for passing counterfeit bills, the reputation of his neighborhood was held receivable by the supreme court of North Carolina, to show that he was a moneyed man. The State v. Cochran, 2 Rev. 63. Here it was offered in behalf of a prisoner in close custody for debt, to prove that he was insolvent. It is quite obvious what the answer would always be under such circumstances; and yet how fallible, as the ground of conclusion by a jury. It would seem at all times to come within the spirit of the rule which rejects hearsay evidence to support a particular fact; and when offered in connection with circumstances directly calculated to establish insolvency of themselves, and raise a general rumor of it in the neighborhood, reputation would be, at best, but a very poor item of proof. Suppose a merchant to sue for words charging him with bankruptcy, was it ever thought the defendant could aid his plea of truth in justification, by proving the plaintiff to be a reputed bankrupt ?

6. The rule of Huffman v. Hulbert, 13 Wendell, 377, which the judge *384refused to apply, was this: A request made by a surety to the creditor that he should sue the principal, and a refusal, will not discharge the surety, though the principal finally turn out to be insolvent, unless it be made clear by proof that he was solvent at the time of the request, and the debt lost by the delay. It is barely necessary to state the point resolved in that case to see that the judge was right here.

There is no reason for interfering on the ground that the damages found by the jury were excessive.

New trial denied.

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