Lambard v. Fowler

25 Me. 308 | Me. | 1845

The opinion of the Court was by

Tenney J.

When this action was commenced, it was for the recovery of damages alleged to have been sustained by the default of John Kimball, a deputy of the defendant, who was sheriff of this county, in not retaining property attached upon a writ in favor of the plaintiff and William Lambard, his partner, since deceased, against one Robinson. Judgment was recovered against Robinson on June 9,1838; execution was issued thereon July 5, 1838, and on the next day, when he was a deputy under another sheriff, who had succeeded the defendant, was delivered to the said Kimball. The defendant relies upon the statute of limitations.

“ All actions against a sheriff, except for escape of prisoners committed on execution, for the negligence or misconduct of his deputies, shall be commenced within four years, next after the cause of action shall accrue.” Rev. Stat. c. 146, § 2.

The return of goods as attached upon mesne process by a sheriff imposes upon him the duty to keep them till the expiration of thirty days after final judgment in the action in favor of the creditor, notwithstanding he may cease to be the sheriff after the attachment. Tukey & al. v. Smith, 18 Maine R. 125 ; Bailey v. Hall, 16 Maine R. 408. And a demand by the creditor, within thirty days after his judgment, of the goods attached, that they may be taken in execution and disposed of by sale, and a failure to deliver them renders him liable; and *311the duties and liabilities of deputies are in all respects similar to those of a sheriff; and the latter is answerable for such neglects of the former, if the neglects were of duties devolving upon them when they held deputations under him. Morton & al. v. White & al. 16 Maine R. 53. If the deputy, who has returned goods attached upon mesne process, receive the execution issued upon the judgment in the same action in favor of the creditor, in season to save the attachment, though he may be a deputy at the time under another sheriff, no other demand of the property is necessary; for he being presumed to have in possession the property attached, is obliged by his duty as an officer to make the seizure; and should ho omit to do so, till the expiration of the attachment, in consequence of having suffered the goods to go from his possession and control, he and the sheriff whose deputy he was at the time of the attachment, is responsible to the creditor for the damages sustained ; after the attachment is dissolved through the fault of the officer, neither a delay till the return day of the execution, nor a demand for the amount thereof is necessary to make perfect his liability; the creditor cannot, either by demand or the delay, be restored to the right which he has lost; and the cause of action accrues immediately upon the neglect. Williams College v. balch, 9 Greenl. 74.

In the case before us, Kimball held the office of deputy sheriff when the plaintiff’s execution was delivered to him, and it was in his hands in season to have seized the goods, which he had attached on the original writ; he omitted to make the seizure, because he had permitted them to be removed from his possession before the judgment; and he was liable for that neglect immediately upon the expiration of the attachment, which was on the 10th day of July, 1838. This action was commenced for that cause on the 25th of August, 1842, and was too late.

Under general leave to amend, a new count was filed on the 10th day of September, 1844, which is to be a part of the writ, if properly allowed; the plaintiff’s counsel insist that it *312is for the same cause of action with the original declaration, which is denied by the other party.

It is true, if a deputy sheriff has been guilty of negligence or misconduct, in his office, by which a debtor or creditor has been injured, an action for such injury may be brought directly against the deputy or the sheriff; and in the latter case the wrong may be charged generally as committed by the sheriff, and on trial be proved to have been done by the deputy, for whose acts, he is answerable. Walker v. Foxcroft, 2 Greenl. 270. But the reverse of this rule would be absurd. If a new count is for the same acts of the deputy charged in a different form from that originally in the writ, it is for the same cause of action ; but if the new counts for other and distant acts, and of the sheriff instead of the deputy, which are not embraced in the charges contained in the first count, it is otherwise, though intended for the recovery of damages arising from the loss of the same rights.

If the two counts are for the same cause of action, it is not easy to perceive that the statute of limitations can apply less to one than to the other. The allegation in the writ in general terms, that the sheriff is guilty of the acts, which are proved to have been done by the deputy, cannot extend the time, within which the action may be brought therefor against the former; the principal can be holden only four years for defaults of the deputy, after the cause of action accrued, whether the writ contains the general charge against him, or the special declaration, that the deputy was guilty.

The new count filed by the plaintiff is for the acts and neglects of the sheriff himself, for which the deputy is in no way officially responsible to him : the other is for the neglects of the deputy alone, for which the sheriff was once liable, upon the proof in the case, to the creditor; and the amendment was "unauthorized.

Plaintiff nonsuit.

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