This is a complaint brought to recover
Jackson, the present plaintiff, was a deputy sheriff, and had in his hands an execution in favor of one Beebe against one Charles Williams, which execution he had levied on the chattels replevied as being the property of Williams, and had taken them out of the possession of Emmons, (the present defendant,) who claimed to hold them as the administrator of Jonathan Williams. The evidence offered by the defendant and objected to by the plaintiff tended to show that the property so levied upon did not belong to Charles Williams at all, but was the property of the defendant as
There are twelve reasons of appeal. As to the second and tenth it is sufficient to say that, in respect to the property now in question, there has never been any judgment, and that the transaction could not be res adjudícala. As to the fourth reason, none of the elements of an estoppel are found to exist. All the other reasons may be resolved into one question:—May a defendant in a suit on a replevin bond, where a breach is admitted or shown, prove the real amount of the damages which the plaintiff has suffered to be less than the value of the goods ? We understand this question to be settled in the affirmative by repeated decisions in this and other states. Green v. Barker, 14 Conn., 431 ; Allen v. Woodford, 36 id., 143 ; Vinton v. Mansfield, 48 id., 474 ; Jones v. Smith, 79 Maine, 452 ; Leonard v. Whitney, 109 Mass., 265 ; 2 Sedgwick on Damages, 7th ed., 440, and note.
There is no error in the judgment appealed from.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.