15 Ky. 105 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1824
THIS was an action of trespass, brought by William R. and Tully R. Payne, against David Harris, sheriff of
is, sheriff of Allen county, in virtue of which the said Sutton took the slaves in the declaration mentioned, they being the proper goods and chattels of the said Alfred Payne, which is the same trespass supposed, and not others and divers; and this he is ready to verify.” ^ie defendant pleaded, in substance, “that on the of October, 1821, an execution issued from the office of the Allen circuit court, directed to the sheriff of Allen county, in favor of William M’Ferrin, against the estate of Alfred Payne, for the sum of $888, with interest, &c. which execution was put into the hands of T. Sutton, deputy sheriff of this defendant, who then i f;ii ------- WaS’ dnü stU1
To this plea the plaintiffs demurred, and the circuit court adjudged the plea bad, aud sustained the demur-The defendant then pleaded the general issue, w*th leave t° give the special matter in evidence. On the trial, the defendant offered two deeds in evidence, both of which were rejected by the court. He also produced as a witness, Sutton, the deputy sheriff who taken the slaves in virtue of the execution against Alfred Payne; but he being objected to as a witness, the court sustained the objection; to each of which °pini°ns the defendant excepted, and the jury having found a verdict against him, he moved the court for a new trial; but the court overruled the motion, to which ^kewise excepted, speading the whole evidence upon the record; anda judgment having been rendered for the plaintiffs, upon the verdict, the defendant ]las brought the case to this court bv writ of error with i° * supersedeas.
The first question necessary to be noticed, grows out of the demurrer to the plea. The only objection taken argument, to the plea, was, that it amounts to the general issue. Were this the only objection to which the plea was liable, we should have no hesitation • .f , ,, . ., , , , , . , . . saying that the circuit court had erred in sustaining the demurrer; for, in the first place, we cannot admit ^at the plea does amount to the general issue. The genera^ issue denies or traverses the whole cause of action, and the plea in this cases denies or traverses no
The next question to be noticed, is, whether that court erred in rejecting the two deeds offered by the defendant as evidence. One of these was a conveyance by Alfred Payne to W. R. Payne, of his undivided interest in their deceased father’s estate, and the other was a deed of trust, or mortgage, given by Alfred to W. R. Payne, on a tract of land, to secure the payment of a debt. For what purpose these deeds were offered to be read as evidence, is not stated in the bill of exceptions, and upon the face of the deeds themselves, there is nothing to show that they had any connexion with the matters in issue between the parties in this
The next question to be noticed, grows out of the exception taken to the rejection of the deputy sheriff as a witness on the part of the defendant. It appears that the deputy had, in virtue of an execution, taken the slaves in question as the property of Alfred Payne, and unquestionably, if they were not the property of Alfred Payne, but the property of the plaintiffs, as they allege, the taking was wrongful, and the defendant, as principal sheriff, was liable therefor; and it cannot admit of a doubt, where the principal sheriff is made liable by the default of his deputy, that the latter would be responsible to the former. It is true, that ' the verdict and judgment against, the principal, would not, in such a case, be evidence that the recovery had been had for the default of the deputy; but they would be evidence against him, that the principal had been damnified to the extent of the recovery, and as they might be used for that purpose, it is obvious, that, in another action against the principal for the default of his deputy, the latter would be interested in the event of the suit. The decision of the .circuit court, that the deputy was an incompetent witness, is therefore correct.
The only remaining point to be noticed, relates to the refusal ,of the circuit court to grant a new trial. The evidence on the trial showed that the plaintiffs had bought from Alfred Payne the slaves in question, and had paid him a valuable consideration, and taken an absolute bill of sale therefor, prior to the emanation of the execution in virtu.e of which the slaves had been taken; but the defendant questioned the validity of the sale of the slaves to the plaintiffs, as to creditors and purchasers, upon the ground that there had been no change of the possession of the slaves from Alfred Payne to the piaintiffs. With respect to the transfer of the possession of the slaves, the evidence must be admitted to be of an ambiguous and equivocal character; but, we apprehend, it did conduce, in some degree, to prove a change of possession, and in such a ca?e this
Judgment affirmed, with damages and costs.
Thomas B. Monroe, Esq one of the counsel for the plaintiff in error, presented the following petition for a rehearing: ,
THE counsel for plaintiff in error, respectfully asks the court for a rehearing of this cause.
If any apology were necessary for again pressing this case upon the court, after it has been twice argued at the bar, once on a motion of the plaintiff for a supersedeas, in which he prevailed, and'secondly, on the hearing in chief, after which the court have affirmed the original judgment, it is believed that it will be found in these very circumstances, connected with the fact stated in the opinion, that the court has, in the last instance, decided against the plaintiff on the demurrer, upon a ground not taken by the defendant’s counsel, or otherwise suggested in either of the arguments. On this point the counsel believes he can show from the author-, ities, that the court has been accidentally led into error.
The court say: “But the plea, though not bad on the ground alleged in the argument, is liable to another objection, which must be deemed fatal, and that is, for want of a traverse that the slaves in question were the property of the plaintiffs;” and to prove this position, proceed with the following argument: . “The allegation in the plea, that the slaves were the property of Alfred Payne, is obviously a material allegation.” To this position, the. counsel unhesitatingly accedes. The opinion proceeds, “and it is equally clear, that it is inconsistent with the allegation in the declaration, that the slaves were the plaintiffs.” This, he also admits, so far as it goes, and will farther contend, that the allegation in the plea is not only inconsistent with that in the declaration; but that it is contrary to it, and implies its negation, and it is hoped, from what follows in the opinion, that the court will not object to this extension of the position, or different mode of expressing it; for it is obvious, that the “general rule” which the court proceeds to lay down, is broad enough to cover the po
The first case is Digby vs. Fitzherbert, from Hob. 103. It was a .quare impedit. The plaintiff counted of a grant of A. seized in fee; the defendant showed he was seized only per after vie; yet, says the book, he may traverse the seizin in fee; but it is not said to be imperatively required. And in Mod. 869, the necessity is also expressed jn the same dubious terms—“and to add a traverse is the surest way.” I am satisfied it is not necessary. The case cited by Williams-is put by Comyns, in his Dig. vol. 102, G 3, as one wherein the traverse is not necessary, yet may be made. He also puts this case,, which shows the reason of the preceding, prefacing it with these words: “Yet if there be not a full
The second case is Tufton vs. Temple, Vaugh. 8, of which I have not been able to find account.
The third is. Conway vs. Phillips, 1 Sid. 301, of which I am compelled to make the same remark.
The fourth is Walton vs. Sparks, 1 Ld. Raymond, 40', which is so obviously wanting in analogy, that I will only request the court to look into it, if they deem it
The fifth case is Ewer vs. Mole, cited from Yelverton. It was thus the plaintiff alleged a seizin in fee; the defendant shewed a conditional fee, and it was adjudged that he ought to traverse the fee alleged, or it would be intended an absolute fee. Here, the estate alleged by the plaintiff, and that admitted by the defendant to be in the plaintiff, were different estates; and the estate alleged by the plaintiff, was not negatived nor avoided. The principle of this case is fully illustrated by another found on the same page, in which the plaintiff alleged seizin until A. died without issue, and the defendant confessed an estate until B. died without issue, wherein it was ruled that he must traverse the estate alleged by the plaintiff, “for they are different estates,” said the court. And in the next page, the same decision is given on the same reason. The plaintiff counted on an estate to him and his heirs male, and the defendant on one to him and his heirs female; it was held, he must traverse the first estate surmised by the plaintiff, for here the estates were also different. But to show at once the difference bet wen all these cases and ours, it is sufficient to say, the plaintiffs in all the
Having omitted to give color to the plaintiffs alleged estate, they could not allege another estate in the plaintiff, nor could they claim an inferior estate to themselves, without traversing the estate on which the plaintiff counted; whereas, the estate alleged in the declaration, in our case, is the identical estate shown to be in the defendant in the execution.
It was not necessary to give color to the title alleged in the declartiOn; because the want of it only made the plea amount to the general issue. This constitutes no objection on general demurrer, which only can be now employed. It was not necessary to make a formal traverse; because the affirmative in our plea, differing from those contained in the cases cited, meets the whole ground of the allegation in the declaration. The estate alleged in the plea to be in Alfred Payne, is not either a different or inferior estate, but is identically the same; and the allegation of title to it, is contrary to the allegation of title in the declaration, and implies its negation in toto. In such a case, it is unnecessary to make a formal traverse, as will be shown by the authorities. Cliitty lays down the rule correctly. He says, “when there are two affirmatives, which do not imply to negative each other, or a confession or avoidance by arguments only, a traverse is necessary.” Our plea may surely be tested by this rule. To say nothing of the plea, having admitted the taking, it meets the action, not by an affirmative, amounting merely to an argumentative denial of the title alleged to the property in the declaration; but it meets it by an allegation which does necessarily give it the implied negative; and if so, Chitty says the traverse is unnecessary. He puts this case as an illustration, and which has been cited by the court against the plea, and must, therefore, be examined: Where the defenclaut alleges seizin in A. the plaintiff cannot, in his replication, allege seizin in B. from whom he claims, without either traversing or confessing and avoiding the seizin alleged by the defendant. Now, it is not presumable, that this case was put. by
But the reliance is not exclusively on the refutation of the apparent authorities against the plea; for the affirmative authorities are conclusive. Some of the cases will be cited. If the defendant plead that the plaintiff abated after the death of A. and the plaintiff re-' plies that A. devised to him, he need not traverse the abatement. Yel. 151; Cro. Car. 581. So, if there be a suggestion in a prohibition or perpetual unity, if
One other case will be- cited. “If the defendant justifies an imprisonment by the sheriff’s warrant, upon a capias, and that the plaintiff escaped, whereon he, by the same warrant, re-took him; if the plaintiff replies that'he escaped by the sheriff’s consent, lie need not traverse the second.” 1 Brown 187. Here, one of the material allegations in the defendant’s plea, was, that the plaintiff escaped, which the plaintiff was not required to traverse, but admitted to allege the sheriff’s consent, a fact inconsistent with such an escape, which allows the defendant to be retaken on the same capias; nor was he required to traverse the second taking.
But Mr. Williams seems to have gone on a supposition, that two affirmatives could never make an issue. This I have already shown, is not Mr. Chitty’s doctrine-. He says, where two affirmatives do not implicitly negative each other, a traverse, &:c. is necessary; but not where this negative is implied.
In the case of the Commonwealth for the use of Wier vs. Bush, this court held, that the allegation that the
But there is another ground on which I will place this question. I lay it down as a rule, without excep-' tion, that in all actions concerning personal property, wherein it is necessary for the plaintiff to allege and prove the title of the property to be in himself, the defendant may, by giving either express or implied colour to his title, allege property either in himself, the defendant under whom he justifies or claims, or a stranger, without traversing the title of the plaintiff. Where color is given to an allegation, it never need be traversed; and color is but form, and not available on general demurrer, and in this view, the plea in question is good. For the first position above laid down, the court are cited to 1 Chitty’s Plead. 368 or 500, and the several cases there cited; and that color is but form, same book 370 or 503, and the authorities there cited.
To illustrate this case, suppose the plea had stated that the plaintiffs below had purchased the slaves from the defendant in the execution, prior to the emanation of a fieri facias, but the possession had not been delivered until after the writ came to his hands, and added the allegations now found in the plea, concluding as he does, with an averment that the slaves were the property of Alfred Payne; or suppose the plea had said, that Alfred Payne was possessed of the goods as his own property and had lost them, and that the plaintiffs below had found them and bailed them to Thomas Payne, Thomas Gattan and Tarleton R. Gattan, and had added the other averments contained in his plea, with the adj dition that he had levied on the slaves in possession of the bailees, concluding as above; would not the plea have been good, according to the strictest rules of the common law? and is there any thing wanting in the plea that was pleaded, except it be this color given in the supposed cases to the plaintiff’s title? And if this color be but form, the omission of it cannot be fatal. It would be a strange construction of the statutes which
The attention of the court will again be called to the opinion of the circuit court, rejecting the deputy sheriff who levied the execution, as a witness on the part of the defendant below, though the counsel does confess, that he has not the same confidence on this ground that he has upon the plea. It is conceded, that it cannot admit of a doubt, that where the principal sheriff is made liable by the default of the deputy, the latter will be responsible to the former, and that the verdict and judgment against the principal, might be used in a suit against the deputy, to prove the fact and amount of the recovery, leaving the balance of the case to be made out by other evidence; but the question is, would the damage to the principal, in case of a recovery in this suit, result from a default of the.deputy? By the act of December 27th, 1803, (3 Lift. 445, 2 Dig. L. K. 2047,) the sheriff is bound, whenever the plaintiff in the execution shall indemnify him, to sell the property, even after the finding of a jury against the right of such defendant; and in this case it is proved the sheriff was indemnified. See the record, page 7. The question then is, can the deputy be made liable by the principal for doing an act which he was bound by law to do? The bond of indemnity should betaken, it is presumed, as all other official acts should be performed, in the name of the principal sheriff, and, therefore, on this bond the sheriff should seek his redress in case he were damnified. The deputy could not be liable to the principal, unless he failed to take sufficient security; and in our case, it does not appear he could be so liable, for the evidence is, that the “said M’Ferrins,” plaintiffs in the execution, “having indemnified the sheriff.,” which imports that a bond was taken to the principal sheriff, in due form, with sufficient securities. It was not necessary to introduce the bond. The parol evidence was competent to prove the fact, whilst no objection was made to it.
“Next to doing right, the great object in the administration of public justice, should be, to give public sat
On the whole case, the counsel does believe, that the justice and equity of the case, is with his clients, in whom are embraced the plaintiffs in the execution, on whom must fall the whole of the judgment, if not reversed, without hope of redress; and having great confidence, that on a rehearing, he would be able to prove the law to be also with them, he respectfully solicits of the court a rehearing on the points here presented.
T. B. MONROE, for plaintiff in error.
But the court, on the 16th of June, overruled the petition.
Chitty 430 594, Com. Dig. Pleader, H Black^Vf) to 472. ’