51 Neb. 542 | Neb. | 1897
This was an action by the defendant in error, Nellie E. Miles, as plaintiff, in the district court for Frontier county, in which the defendants therein, Frank E. Teel and A. S. Sands, were jointly charged (1) with the wrongful and forcible entering of the plaintiff’s premises and the driving away of thirty-two head of horned cattle and nine horses, to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $40; (2) the breaking down and destroying of plaintiff’s fence, to her damage in the sum of $35; (3) the failure to properly feed and care for the stock so wrongfully taken while in defendants’ possession, to-wit, for the period of eight weeks, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $200. The defendants answered jointly, admitting the taking, by the defendant Teel, of certain cattle and horses from the plaintiff’s premises and possession as charged, but alleging that in taking said property said Teel acted in his official capacity as sheriff of Frontier county, in the execution of a certain order of replevin, issued out of the county court for said county, in an action therein pending, wherein the defendant Sands was plaintiff and the said plaintiff, Nellie E. Miles, was defendant. It was further alleged that, previous to commencement of this
It is first argued that there is in the record no foundation for the theory upon which the action was prosecuted to judgment, viz., that the defendants below were joint trespassers" being engaged in the abuse of the writ held by Teel: That proposition, so far as .it applies to the taking of the property and alleged destruction of defendant in error’s fences and consequent damage, is undoubtedly sound. The action is to that extent, at least, one sounding in tort, and in order to render the plaintiff in error liable for the alleged wrongs it must be made to appear that he was a party thereto. It was held in Murray v. Mace, 41 Neb., 60, that one who, with knowledge of the facts, advises the abuse of process by an officer, or who, being a party to such process, subsequently ratifies unlawful acts committed in its execution, will be deemed a wrong-doer from the beginning; but one who merely delivers to an officer a valid writ, without direction as to the manner of its service, will not, in the absence of a ratification, be held liable for torts committed in the execution thereof. There is in this case an entire failure of the proof to connect plaintiff in error with the acts of the sheriff in the execution of the writ; hence there was, as regards that issue, no question for submission to the jury.
The plea of res judicata was sustained by the record of the former judgment. It follows, therefore, that the district court erred in submitting the cause to the jury and in refusing to set aside the verdict rendered, for which the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.