281 Mass. 214 | Mass. | 1932
This is an appeal from a decision of the Appellate Division of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston, dismissing a report by a trial judge who found for the defendants in a suit by a constable upon a bond of indemnity given him by the defendants upon the making of an attachment.
On August 5, 1918, the defendants brought suit against one Angelica Costa, .and placed the writ in the hands of the plaintiff as a constable for service. The ad damnum of the writ was $150. The plaintiff was instructed by counsel for the defendants to put a keeper in the place of business of Costa, but no instructions were given as to the amount or value of the property to be attached. An attachment of personal property was made upon that writ, and also upon another writ with an ad damnum of $200, brought by another creditor of Costa, and a keeper put in as directed. Then the attorney for the present defendants, after a notice from mortgagees, instructed the plaintiff to remove the attached chattels, but gave the plaintiff no directions as to the quantity or value of the chattels to be removed. The plaintiff demanded and received from the defendants the bond in suit, conditioned that it should be void if the defendants should indemnify and save harmless the plaintiff from all suits, damages and costs for which he “may be liable or obliged by law to pay to any person or persons by reason of the said attachment, or of any further inter-meddling of said Paul R. Cast by virtue of said process.”
Under his attachment, the plaintiff removed chattels belonging to Costa of the value, known to the plaintiff, of not less than $2,000. The defendants recovered judgment against Costa in the sum of $103.85, and the plaintiff sold all the attached property on execution for the sum of $125. Costa sued the plaintiff and these defendants jointly for conversion and abuse of process. The present defendants obtained a directed verdict in their favor, but judgment
The plaintiff, on June 18, 1931, brought this action against the defendants on the bond of indemnity. The trial judge found that in making the excessive attachment and in removing and selling the attached goods the plaintiff “wilfully abused the process” by virtue of which the attachment was made, and found for the defendants. This finding was justified on the evidence, although the goods were subject to mortgages aggregating $900.
By the recitals in the bond as to the making of an attachment the defendants may be estopped to deny that the plaintiff made an attachment at their request, but they are not estopped to set up that the plaintiff wilfully exceeded his authority and their directions. If a wilful wrongdoer by any form of words can obtain a valid contract for indemnity, the general language of the bond in the present case ought not to be construed to give the plaintiff indemnity against the consequences of his own wilful abuse of process. Bills v. Comstock, 12 Met. 468. Boynton v. Morrill, 111 Mass. 4. Wiggin v. Atkins, 136 Mass. 292. Abbott v. Kimball, 23 Vt. 542, 545. Sharvy v. Cash, 66 Minn. 200. See also Babcock v. Terry, 97 Mass. 482; Davis v. Royal Arcanum, 195 Mass. 402; Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Johnson, 254 U. S. 96, and cases cited; Todd v. Traders & Mechanics Ins. Co. 230 Mass. 595, 599; Boston & Maine Railroad v. T. Stuart & Son Co. 236 Mass. 98, 104; Slocum v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. 245 Mass. 565; Sontag v. Galer, 279 Mass. 309, 313; DeMello v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. ante, 190. Compare C. F. Jewett Publishing Co. v. Butler, 159 Mass. 517; Clarke v. Ames, 267 Mass. 44, 47; McMahon v. Pearlman, 242 Mass. 367; Messersmith v. American Fidelity Co. 232 N. Y. 161; Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey v. United States,
Order dismissing report affirmed.