47 N.H. 494 | N.H. | 1867
If there was a fraudulent contrivance between the plaintiff and his brother, A. W. Moore, to induce the officer to attach the plaintiff’s mare, instead of one of the Bronson horses, by holding-out that mare to be one "of those horses, either by representation or acts, and the officer, relying upon such holding out, had attached the mare, and suffered the Bronson horse to escape, the plaintiff would be estopped to set up title to the mare in himself. Drew v. Kimball, 43 N. H. 282. To have this effect, however, the defendant must actually have been misled by the plaintiff’s conduct, and induced thereby to change his
In Odlin v. Gove, 41 N. H. 479, which was a writ of entry to recover a strip of land fifteen inches wide on the street on which defendant had placed the walls of a building, and defendant attempted to set up an estoppel, upon the ground that plaintiff stood by and saw the building erected without objection, it was held, that if, under all the circumstances, including the plaintiff’s silence, the defendant unreasonably failed to use the means of ascertaining the boundaries which were within his reach, he had no cause to complain ; because, in cases of this sort, he is to be charged with such knowledge as reasonable diligence would have given him; and it has been accordingly held that a prior mortgagee of real estate who stands by and witnesses a second mortgage without objection, will not be postponed thereby, if his mortgage was duly registered; see Odlin v. Gove, before cited, p. 477, and cases. Such is also the doctrines of Carter v. Champion, 8 Conn. 554; Begalow & ux. v. Topliff & al., 25 Vt. 273; and Brinkerhoff v. Lansing, 4 Johns. Ch. Rep. 63. In the latter case it is said by Ohancellor Kent that it would require direct proof of intentional deception and fraud on the part of Lansing, before he could be postponed to a subsequent purchaser, his, (Lansing’s) mortgage, being duly registered. He does not, to be sure, say that if such intentional fraud had been shown, Lansing’s mortgage would be postponed; nor did that question arise, though it may fairly be inferred that such was the learned Chancellor’s opinion.
It may, however, be difficult to distinguish between the case as it really existed, and what it would have been had intentional fraud been shown. In that case, Lansing’s mortgagor leased part of the mortgaged lands for sixteen years, and Lansing was a subscribing witness to the execution of the lease, with a knowledge of its contents, and without any objection; and it was held, that, as the mortgage was regis:ered, the lessee was charged with constructive notice of it, and there vas no estoppel. If the mortgage had not been registered, Lansing vould have been estopped; and upon the ground that his conduct amount-id to an affirmation that he had no title inconsistent with that which the essor was then conveying ; and it would, therefore, be a fraud in him o attempt afterwards to set up his mortgage. Whether at the time of xecuting the lease he intended at a subsequent period to assert his mortage title against the lessee, or not, would be entirely immaterial in repeat to the estoppel, for the fraud would consist in denying what he
However this may be, we find no case that goes the length of enabling a party to set up an estoppel of this sort, when with reasonable attention to the means of information at his hand he would not have been misled. In the case before us, the evidence of fraud on the part of the plaintiff was not very explicit, and the circumstances stated are equivocal ; and it was proper that the jury should be instructed that the defendant was bound to the exercise of reasonable diligence under the circumstances, in the use of means at his hands to ascertain the truth about the horses. If he rashly decided upon the matter, with a careless indifference to the means of information, reasonably within his reach, he would not be entitled to complain. 2 Kent’s Com. 485. Such, as we understand it, was the charge of the judge, in substance. What would be due diligence, was for the jury.
In regard to the intermingling of the horses, no instructions were given, although that point was argued by defendant’s counsel, and an authority cited, meaning to be understood as requesting the court to charge the jury in accordance with that authority. We think, however, that the instructions should be asked for in a way to leave it open to no doubt; and that if no instructions were given upon a particular subject, and the attention of the judge not called to it at the close of or during the charge, ordinarily it would be understood as waived.
If the horses were accidentally placed as they were in the stable, without fraud on the part of the plaintiff, and the defendant selected two as the horses of the debtor, and attached them, intending to hold them at all events, and not temporarily till he could get further information, and he insisted upon holding them after notice that one of them belonged to the plaintiff, he would be liable in trespass, if the horse did belong to the plaintiff, and he was not estopped to claim it by some fraudulent act on his part. Had the plaintiff’s and the debtor’s horses been intermingled so that the officer, using due diligence, could not distinguish them, he might, perhaps, take all and hold them until there was an opportunity to identify them ; but his right to take possession and hold the plaintiff’s horse would be limited by the occasion for it, and if, instead of taking it for the lawful purpose, he took it with the purpose of holding it at all events, he would be liable in trespass. The instructions on that point were, therefore, correct.
But it is urged that the two horses were so placed by the fault and negligence of the plaintiff, and that as the defendant was thereby misled, the taking was not unlawful. Had they been accidentally placed in adjoining stalls, it is quite clear that this would give the defendant no right to attach the plaintiff’s horse as the property of the debtor, any
It is clear, then, we think, that, in case the horses were so placed by accident, the defendant had no right to attach the plaintiff’s horse. This is clearly the doctrine of Kingsbury v. Pond, 3 N. H. 513 ; and it is not, in fact, contested by defendant’s counsel; but they urge that if the horses were so placed by the plaintiff’s fault, the law is otherwise; and this position makes it necessary to look more closely to the law which governs the rights of the parties where there is a confusion of goods. If the goods are accidentally mingled, and they are of such character that they can be distinguished and separated, there will be no change of property, but each is entitled to his own ; if they are of such a nature that they cannot be identified and separated, as corn, oil, wine, hay, &c., then each is entitled to his aliquot part of the entire quantity.
If goods are mixed by the negligence or inadvertence of one of two owners, and they are of such nature that they can be identified and separated, the property of each remains as before; and the law must be the same where the mixture is by the wilful act of one party, unless the purpose was fraudulent. As if A. mixes some of B.’s cattle, sheep, horses, wood or furniture with his own, erroneously supposing that they belong to him. Ryder v. Hathaway, 21 Pick. 298, 305 ; Story on Bailments sec. 40. To hold otherwise would be clearly unjust, and is not sanctioned by the authorities. The true rule seems to be this, that if one man so confounds the goods of another with his own, that they cannot be distinguished, he must himself bear all the inconveniences of the confusion, and it is for him to distinguish his own property or lose it. This doctrine was applied to the case of a trustee having charge of the property of another. Hart v. Ten Eyck, 2 Johns. Ch. 107.
So also, is Lapton v. White, 15 Ves. 432 ; and this doctrine is recognized by Judge Story in his work on Bailments, sec. 40 ; and so is 2 Kent’s Com. sec. 365. In Pratt v. Bryant al., 20 Vt. 333, it was held that a person who had intermingled his wood with that of another did not lose it thereby, although it could not be distinguished, and the intermingling was intentional, the person having erroneously supposed the other had bargained for it.
If the mixing is wilful and without the consent of the other, and the articles are of such a nature that they cannot be distinguished and separated, the civil law gives the whole to the one not consenting to the
It is clear, of course, that, by mingling these horses, even if done negligently, the debtor acquired no title to the plaintiff’s horse, and the creditor had no right to attach him for A. W. Moore’s debt. Indeed, the law which affects the title in case of the confusion of goods, does not apply to cattle and horses, and things of a similar kind, that may readily be identified. It is so distinctly determined in respect to cattle, in Holbrook v. Hyde, 1 Vt. 286; and it is quite obvious, we think, that it must be so, for the very foundation of the rule is here wanting, and that is, the confusion of the goods, or the inability to identify them. See Treat v. Barber, 7 Conn. 274.
The right of a sheriff having a writ against one of the persons whose goods are together, but distinguishable, grows out of the necessity of the case. He has no right to attach the other’s goods, but is bound to attach the debtor’s. If he is unable to distinguish them, he may detain the whole reasonably, for the purpose of making inquiry; but his right in this direction extends no farther than the necessity of the case demands. If, on reasonable inquiry, he will be enabled to distinguish the goods, he is bound to make it, and could not otherwise justify the detention of another’s goods. If the other owner, on request by the officer to point out his goods, refuse to do it, the officer might then take them and detain them until distinguished and demanded. Such is the doctrine, of Albee v. Webster, 16 N. H. 362.
The mere fact that a party has- been negligent or careless in allowing the goods to be mixed, would not exonerate the officer from the duty of making inquiry. If the party, by his acts or words, wilfully affirmed the property to be the debtor’s, and so misled the sheriff, he might be es-topped to claim the goods afterwards; but the mere negligence of the plaintiff in allowing the horses to be placed in adjoining stalls, could confer no right on the officer to attach and hold the plaintiff’s horse for A. W. Moore’s debt, or to do anything more than to detain it for reasonable inquiry.
If, then, he took the plaintiff’s horse, not to detain it to make inquiry, but because he understood he was directed to attach it, and he did so, intending to hold it at all events, he did it at his peril, and would be liable to plaintiff in trespass; and there was evidence tending to prove that he so intended to hold it, there being testimony that plaintiff’s coun
In the case of Gilman & al. v. Hill, 36 N, H. 311, which was trover for a lot of sheep’s pelts, attached on a writ against one Sanborn, it appeared that part of them belonged to the plaintiffs, and the rest had been mingled with the plaintiffs’ without their knowledge, by the debtor. Upon the attachment, defendant was notified that the pelts belonged to plaintiffs, but he removed them without inquiry as to the plaintiffs’ rights, and after the suit was brought sold them; the court held this was evidence of conversion; and it must have been upon the ground that defendant took them intending to attach and hold them, and not for the purpose of inquiry.
Where a debtor drove his sheep to plaintiff’s pasture, and mixed them with plaintiff’s without his consent, and the sheriff took the whole, the court held that he was liable in trespass to the plaintiff. Kingsbury v. Pond, 3 N. H. 513. The court say that if the sheriff had requested the plaintiff to point out his sheep, and he had refused to do so, it might have altered the case. We think, however, that the result would have been the same if the plaintiff had consented to take the debtor’s sheep to pasture, but without any purpose to conceal them from the officer.
When corn of the plaintiff’s was intermixed with that of the debtor, without the consent of either, it was decided that an officer might take and hold the whole until the plaintiff identified his corn and demanded a delivery. Lewis v. Whittemore, 5 N. H. 366. In that case the intermixture must be regarded as accidental, and as the corn could not be distinguished, the owners would be tenants in common of their several shares; Story on Bail. sec. 40; and a sheriff might take and sell the debtor’s interest.
In Walcott v. Keith, 22 N. H. 211, it is said that to justify an attachment of the goods of another, on the ground of their being mixed with those of the debtor, defendant must show that they were intermixed in such manner that he could not, upon due inquiry, distinguish them from the others ; and so is Wilson v. Lane, 33 N. H. 476, holding, per Bell, J., that it is the duty of the officer to make reasonable inquiry to ascertain what goods are liable to be attached; but that it was enough if he applied to plaintiff to point out his goods, and he refused to do it.
The case of Robinson v. Holt, 39 N. H. 557, goes upon the ground that the hay sued for was so intermixed with that of the debtor, that it could not be distinguished, and that it was intermixed by the fault or negligence of the debtor, of such character, that, as between the plaintiff and the officer, it all became the property of the debtor. If the facts are all reported, such a conclusion might be questionable, perhaps, but however this may be, the case differs widely from the one before us, because here the property was easily distinguished.
Taylor v. Jones, 42 N. H. 25, was trespass, and it was held that as the goods were mixed with those of the debtor, being marked as the
In Shumway v. Rutter, 8 Pick. 443, which was trover for some furniture attached by the defendant as the property of J. S., it appeared that plaintiff’s furniture was mixed with the debtor’s, and in his possession, and so mixed that neither the plaintiff nor the debtor could distinguish it; that at the time of the attachment, J. S. told the officer it was all his, but soon after the plaintiff claimed a part of it, and defendant desired him to select what he claimed, but the plaintiff, although he produced the bill of sale of what he claimed, and showed it to the defendant, said he could not select the articles, neither could the debtor select them. The officer, therefore, retained and sold the whole.
The court decided that defendant was not a trespasser for taking the plaintiff’s goods which he had allowed to be so intermixed,-but that the sale of the whole was a conversion, upon the ground that he ought to have selected from the whole quantity enough to correspond with the bill of sale, and might, if he chose, retain the most valuable. The court also says that if the owner of a part can distinguish and point out what belongs to him, the officer would be a trespasser if he should take it.
In that case, the goods were so intermixed they could not be distinguished, and it is therefore clear that the officer would not be a trespasser for taking possession of the whole. In principle, the case is much like that of Lewis v. Whittemore, where plaintiff and the debtor were tenants in common of the whole mass.
The case of Ryder v. Hathaway, 21 Pick. 306, was trespass for wood, and the court held that if the 'plaintiff mixed wood from his own lot with wood from the defendant’s lot adjoining, supposing it all to be his, and the defendant, knowing that part of it was the plaintiff’s, took the whole, he -would be a trespasser. This would certainly be so, if defendant knew what part belonged to plaintiff, and could distinguish it; otherwise, if so intermixed that it could not be separated, they would, in such case, be tenants in common.
Smith v. Sanborn, 6 Gray 134, is a case where a debtor sold his stock of furniture to the plaintiff for $2000, and the plaintiff took possession of the store and furniture, and commenced retailing it, making new purchases from time to time, to the amount of $200, which was added to the original stock. The defendant attached and sold the whole as the debtor’s property. The court decided that the defendant had no right to attach the whole stock in plaintiff’s possession, without first endeavoring, by the exercise of a proper degree of caution and diligence, to ascertain whether any, and if any, what part of it, was honestly owned by the plaintiff, and that it did not necessarily devolve upon the plaintiff, and without request, to give information about the state of the title; that it was no more than a reasonable precaution on the part of the
In Treat v. Barber & al., 7 Conn. 274, it was held that the confusion of goods is the mixture of substances that make one undistinguishable mass, such as liquids, corn, hay, &c., citing Wood’s Just. 158, and 2 Blk. Com. 404. But that placing crockery, china or other articles resembling each other on the same shelf, is not a confusion of them, within the meaning of the law.
The defendant introduced evidence 'tending to show that plaintiff had intermingled her goods with her father’s goods, so that she alone could distinguish them, and that, wishing to attach the father’s goods, he requested her to select such as belonged to her, but she refused to do it, claiming the whole as her own, part of them by bona fide purchase of her father. The court held that, as she claimed the whole, her refusal to select was no violation of her duty, and the defendant took them at his peril; and the court held that there was no error in refusing to instruct the jury that if she refused so to select, the defendants were not trespassers for taking the whole ; but the court held that if the plaintiff had fraudulently intermingled the goods so as to be insepai’able by the officer, to prevent an attachment of those that were her father’s, the officer might justify taking the whole.
From this review of the cases, it is quite apparent that there is some confusion in the authorities upon the subject of confusion of goods ; and so far as the rights of an officer about to make an attachment is concerned, it arises from not properly discriminating between those things which can, and those which cannot, be distinguished, when mingled together.
As to those which can be distinguished, the doctrine of confusion of goods does not apply, and although they may be wrongfully mingled by one owner, without the consent of the other, the title of neither is affected ; and consequently the goods of one cannot be taken for the debts of the other. If, however, they are fraudulently intermingled to mislead and embarrass the officer, and prevent an attachment, he would be justified in taking and holding the whole for the purpose of selecting those of the debtor. As if in a case like that of Kingsbury v. Pond, 3 N. H. 513, the plaintiff had consented to the mixing of the debtor’s sheep with his, so as to conceal them from the officer.
To justify the attachment of the goods of another where they are intermingled without any fraudulent design, and they are distinguishable, the officer must show that they were mixed in such manner that upon due inquiry he could not distinguish those of the debtor from the others. Walcott v. Keith, 22 N. H. 211; Wilson v. Lane, 33 N. H. 476 ; Smith v. Sanborn, 6 Gray 134; Treat v. Barber & al., 7 Conn. 274 ; Kingsbury v. Pond, 3 N. H. 511.
The language of some of the cases would seem to imply that, if the goods were so intermingled that the officer could not select those of the debtor, he might, without notice to the other party, attach and hold the whole, until those of the other party were designated and claimed by him. Upon such views the officer might have taken all the horses in
Such a doctrine, we think, cannot be supported. It is not necessary to enable the sheriff properly to execute his precept. If, as in this case, he wishes to attach two out of many horses in the same stable, he is bound to make reasonable efforts and inquiries, in order to ascertain what horses belong to the debtor. If the various owners, and the debt- or, are at hand, he would ordinarily inquire of them, although to guard against interference he might, while making such inquiries, detain in the stable such horses as he had reason to suppose might prove to be those he sought. This power, we think, is all that is necessary, and is the view that best accords with the adjudged cases. Nor do we think that the rule is otherwise where the goods are carelessly or negligently intermingled, but without fraud.
In the case of goods that cannot be distinguished, the fault of one party who causes the intermixture may affect the rights of both; but in a case like this, it could not relieve the officer from the duty of making reasonable inquiry to ascertain what goods belong to the person other than the debtor, for such fault does not affect the title; Bryant v. Weave, 30 Me. 299; Gilman & al. v. Hill, 36 N. H. 323 ; 2 Kent’s Com. 364; and unless it was intended to mislead the officer, in which case it would be a fraud, it cannot relieve him of the duty to make reasonable inquiries.
What would be reasonable inquiry, must depend upon the circumstances of the particular case, and cannot be fixed by any positive rule; Wilson v. Lane, 33 N. H. 476; and it is urged by defendant that among the considerations that ought to bear on the question of reasonable inquiry would be the plaintiff’s own negligence, and that there was error in not submitting that to the jury.
There is, however, no objection to the instructions as to reasonable inquiry by the defendant; but the question of negligence in the plaintiff, not submitted to the jury, and for which exception is taken, was, as we understand it, whether, by the plaintiff’s fault in mixing the horses, the defendant was not authorized to attach the two he did take, as he would be, had there been fraud. Besides, from the case as reported, we are at a loss to -perceive any evidence tending to prove negligence on the part of the plaintiff -in allowing these horses to be placed in adjoining stalls.
As already suggested, we are of the opinion that if the defendant attached the plaintiff’s horse with the purpose of holding him at all events, and not temporarily, to make inquiries, he is liable in trespass, and that the instructions on that point are correct.
Under the circumstances, it is clear that if there was no fraud in the plaintiff, the defendant had no right to attach the horse and hold him for A. W. Moore’s debt. At the most, he had only the right to detain him a reasonable time for inquiry, and if he took him for the other purpose he is a trespasser.
It is proper to say that we have been led into this extended examination of authorities, by the able and searching arguments at the bar.
Where the act complained of is malicious or wanton, or is characterized by gross negligence in the defendant, exemplary damages may be awarded, according to the decisions in this State; but we are not aware that they have gone so far as the rule in this case. In Whipple v. Walpole, 10 N. H. 130, the rule laid down was, that exemplary damages might be awarded where there was gross neglxgenee; and the rule laid down by Mr. Sedgwick, in his valuable woi’k on Damages, p. 39, Is, that exemplary damages may be awarded whenever the elements of fraud, malice, gross negligence and oppression mingle in the controversy. This rule, however, is questioned in 2 Green'l. Ev. sec. 253, and note, where the authorities ai’e extensively reviewed.
Upon the whole, we are not disposed to extend the rale which allows exemplary damages to cases where the .injurious acts are merely rash and heedless.
There must, therefore, be judgment on the verdict for $115, the exemplary damages being excluded, on the plaintiffs remitting the $25 for exemplary damages.