72 F. 945 | 9th Cir. | 1896
The plaintiff in error was plaintiff below in an action of replevin, brought on the 1st day of February, 1895, in the circuit court for the district of Washington, Eastern division, for the recovery of the possession from the defendants of two certain locomotive engines, of the alleged value of $10,000. On the same day the plaintiff filed in the same court and cause a motion reciting that it was “about to institute a suit in this court, in its Eastern division, wherein James Drake and Samuel Vinson, respectively marshal and deputy marshal of this court, are and will be necessary defendants, and which suit will involve the right to the possession of property situate and located in the county of Spokane, in such Eastern division,” and praying the court to appoint some disinterested person “to whom writs, precepts, and other process shall issue in said cause, and who shall be authorized to execute and return such process into this court according to law.” Pursuant to that application, the judge appointed 0. A. Cole “to execute and make return of all precepts, writs, and other process issued in the said cause,” and directed that all such precepts, writs, and other process should be directed to the said Oole for execution and return. The necessary affidavit and bond having been given on behalf of the plaintiff, a writ of
“Whereas, oil the 29th day of April, 1895, the demurrer to the answer of said defendant, Samuel Vinson, having been argued and submitted to the court, and said demurrer having been overruled, the court, finding that the several matters and things set forth in the answer of the said Sam. Vinson are sufficient in law to bar the action of the said i>laintiff against the said defendant, considered that the said demurrer be overruled; and, the said plaintiff having obtained leave from the court to serve a reply to said answer on or before the 16th day of May, 1895, and the said plaintiff having elected to stand upon its demurrer and the order overruling the same, now, on motion of H. M. Herman, counsel for the defendant, and after hearing ,Tay H. Adams, counsel for the plaintiff: It is ordered that the defendant have final judgment herein upon the record and pleadings. It is therefore considered by the court that the said defendant do have a return of the goods and chattels taken from him in this action, and now in possession of said plaintiff, under said proceedings; and, in default of the said goods and chattels being so returned, tire said defendant do recover against said plaintiff the said sum of ten thousand dollars (the value of said property as fixed by said plaintiff), his damage so assessed, and also his costs in and nboul his suit in that behalf expended, taxed at-dollars and -cents.
•‘Done at Spokane, in open court, May 18th, 1895.
“C. H. Hauford, Judge.”
On fixe 20th of May following, the plaintiff sued out a writ of error, and on the same day hied his assignment of errors, the first of which was that the court below erred in overruling the demurrer of the plaintiff to the answer of the defendant Yinson; and the second, that the court erred in rendering judgment for the defendants upon the overruling of the demurrer.
The objection of tin; defendant in error to the consideration of the merits of the case because there is no bill of exceptions is not well taken. The writ of error addresses itself to the record (Storm v. U. S., 94 U. S. 76), and the record itself discloses the ground upon which the plaintiff in e^ror seeks a reversal of the judgment.
The writ under which the marshal levied upon the locomotives in question did not command that officer to levy it upon that particular property, or upon any other specific property, but came within the second class of writs described by the supreme court in Buck v. Colbath, 3 Wall. 334, 343, where the officer was directed to levy upon property of the defendant to the writ sufficient to satisfy the demand against it, without describing any specific property to be thus taken. In such a case the obvious duty of the officer is to levy upon property of the defendant to the writ, and not upon property of somebody else. He has, as said by the court in the case cited, “a very large and important field for the exercise of his judgment and discretion. Hirst, in ascertaining that the property on which he proposes to levy is the property of the person against whom the writ is directed; secondly, that it is property which, by law, is subject to be taken under the writ; and, thirdly, as to the quantity of such property necessary to be seized in the case in hand. In all these particulars he is bound to exercise his own judgment, and is legally responsible to any person for the consequences of any error or mistake in its exercise to