1 Gall. 476 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1813
I cannot say that I approve of the practice of an indiscriminate delivery of property seized, on giving bail for the appraised value. It is attended with many inconveniences, and often leads to frauds. In the exchequer in England, no delivery is allowed, unless the property be perishable, or the government officers have been guilty of laches and delays in the prosecution. In the admiralty a more liberal practice seems to prevail, but I believe it will be found, that the court does not lend -an indulgent ear, unless some peculiar ground is laid for the application; and, indeed, a more liberal practice may well prevail in the instance court, because it is seldom that more than a lien on the property ■is sought to be enforced.
I do not consider the present case as governed by any statute provision. I have never considered the 89th section of the act of the 2d of March. 1799, c. 128 [1 Story’s Laws, 653; 1 Stat. 695, c. 20], as reaching beyond cases within the purview of that aet. Though the acts, on which this information is founded, refer to that act as to the mode of prosecution, it does not follow, that all the interlocutory proceedings of the court are to be governed by it. Even, however, under that act, it is not understood that a •delivery on bail is compulsory on the court. It still rests in sound discretion, whether it ■will appoint appraisers.
But admitting this case to be completely within the aet, I do not think that the learned counsel need give himself the trouble of an argument. The question is not new, and I am entirely satisfied, that where the claimant voluntarily accepts a delivery on bail, it is an estoppel of his right to contest the validity of the security. He accepts, or not, at his pleasure, and it would be grossly inequitable, if he might lie by until the close of the cause, receive and use the property, and then, by detecting an error in the bond, set the whole judgment of the court at defiance. In point of fact it is well known that these errors, if any, creep in through inadvertence of the officers of the court, and are not imposed upon the party.
Even if the law were otherwise, it would not avail the claimants. If the bail be not rightfully taken, they have the custody of ■the property or its proceeds, as mere stakeholders for the court; and I should have little difficulty in enforcing, by attachment, a re-delivery of the same to the court. Considering how appraisements are usually made, I presume the claimants would not elect so inconvenient a procedure.
Prescott waived any further motion to the court.