49 Me. 432 | Me. | 1862
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
This is an action of assumpsit upon a receipt, alleged to have been given by the defendants, for property attached by the plaintiff, as deputy sheriff, on a writ in fávor of Lorenzo Matthews, against Joseph M. Frost. The report of the case shows that the general issue was pleaded with specifications of defence, alleging that the property attached on the original writ was not the property of Frost. No copies of the writ, pleadings, specifications of defence, and receipt upon which the action was brought, and which was presented in evidence, have been furnished, but we are relieved from embarrassment by this omission, as we infer from the statements of counsel in argument on both sides, that in addition to the ground of defence, that the property attached was not that of Frost, the defendants put hito their specifications, that the demand of the property by the plaintiff was denied; and that it was alleged that the receipt was given, on the Lord’s day.
After the evidence had all been introduced by the agreement of the parties, a nonsuit was entered, and the case was to be submitted to the whole Court, on a report, with the authority to draw such inferences from the evidence as a jury might do, and the nonsuit to stand, or be discharged, and a default entered as the Court should find the facts and apply the law.
The demand of the property was properly made, and on this ground there is no impediment to the plaintiff’s recovery. No attempt appears, from the case, to have been made to prove that any of the property described in the receipt was not that of Frost.
One of the defendants executed the receipt in the forenoon, and the other about noon, on Sunday. But it satisfactorily appears, from the evidence, that the plaintiff on Saturday wrote the receipt and gave it to Frost for the purpose of obtaining signatures thereto; and, on Monday, next following, it was brought to him by Frost, executed, and the* plaintiff had no knowledge at what particular time the signatures were made.
The receipt was not a contract of binding validity until its delivery to the plaintiff, after its execution. Hilton v. Houghton, 35 Maine, 143. This objection fails.
The plaintiff testified that the doors, sashes and blinds, referred to in the receipt, were not attached by him, Frost saying that they were not his property. But, when the receipt was written, he testified that they were put into the receipt at the request of Frost. Whether they were returned on the writ as attached, we are not informed. If they were so returned, being a part of the property represented in the receipt as attached, the defendants are liable therefor, as for the other property described therein. Jewett v. Torrey, 11 Mass., 219.
JSTonsuit discharged. — Defendants defaulted,.