16 Wend. 514 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1836
After advisement, the following opinion was delivered:
The defendant being sued as a constable for an act done by virtue of his office, bad the right, under the general issue, to give any matter in evidence which was a defence to the suit. 2 R. S. 353, § 15. As he was sued for entering the plaintiff’s close as well as for taking the whiffletree and devices, it was proper to give the attachments in evidence as a justification for the entering of the close to take the property of the person against whom the attachments had issued, even if he was liable for taking the property of the plaintiff which had been attached to the waggon in the manner stated by the witness. I have no doubt, however, that the supreme court was right in holding that if the plaintiff or his servant had exchanged the
The evidence before the justice was'sufficient, prima facie, to prove that the waggon and harness were the property of Godfrey, as he was in possession thereof, claiming to be the owner, before he ran away. This prior occupancy was sufficient evidence of property in Godfrey to cast upon Parker the burden of proving a previous right in himself, or a subsequent title to the property derived from such prior occupant; and as no such proof was given or offered before the justice, the defence of the constable was complete if he had attachments against Godfrey which authorized the taking of his property. The giving of those attachments in evidence was therefore not only pertinent to the issue between these parties, but an essential point in the defence of the constable. '
As the attachments were regular on their face, and the .justice had general jurisdiction over the subject matter of the suits in which they were issued, the burden of proof lay upon Parker to show that the requisites of the statute
Having disposed of this class of cases, which have been supposed by many to be anomalous in their character, and to form an exception to a general rule, 1 am prepared to go with- Mr. Justice Marcy, in his opinion, in the case of Savacool v. Boughton, 5 Wendell, 170, in declaring the settled rule of the common law, at least in this state, to be, that a mere ministerial officer who executes the process of a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter, and having also jurisdiction to issue such process in general, or in certain specified cases, is protected in the execution of such process if it is regular on its face, and apparently within the jurisdiction of the court issuing the same. The several cases on this subject have been so fully and ably examined by that learned judge, in the elaborate opinion to which I have referred, that it would be a useless waste of time for me to attempt to go over the same ground. Suffice it to say that the cases to which he has referred, with one or two exceptions, fully sustain the conclusions at which he arrived on this subject. Even the cases of Suydam & Wickoff v. Keys, 13 Johns. R. 444, and Wise v. Withers, 3 Cranch, 381, which are supposed by Justice Marcy to conflict with this general rule, may perhaps be considered as only forming a reasonable exception to it, and as not coming within the just and equitable principle which protects a ministerial officer in the execution of process which he is bound to presume to have been legally and properly issued. It is admitted to be the law that the process of a court of inferior jurisdiction will not protect the officer, if the want of jurisdiction to issue the same appears tipon the face of the process ; and I apprehend also the same principle may be ap
In the case under consideration, the attachments were regular upon their face, and were issued by a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter of the suits, and having also authority to issue such process, upon a compliance with the statutory regulations on that subject; and there was no fact within the knowledge of the constable, from which he could have supposed that there was any irregularity in the issuing of the attachments. They were, therefore, a sufficient authority to him to enter upon the premises of the plaintiff in error, to take the waggon of Godfrey, the defendant in the attachments. Having the authority to enter and take the waggon, as I have before observed the constable was not liable to an action of trespass, either for entering upon the close of Parker, or for taking the whiffletree and devices which had been attached to the waggon without his knowledge or consent. There was, therefore, no error in the judgment of the justice; and the decision of the supreme court, affirming the same, and reversing the erroneous judgment of the court of common
On the question being put, Shall this judgment be reversed ? all the members of the court present (twenty in number) voted in the negative.
Whereupon the judgment of the supreme court was affirmed.