4 Lans. 263 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1871
The levy upon the property hy the constable, by virtue of an execution against the plaintiff, issued upon a judgment against her, was not a trespass db initia or a tortious acty>6>* se. Prima facie, all property is liable to execution, and it was the duty of the constable in the first instance to make the levy. He cannot know intuitively that property is exempt, nor indeed that exemption will be claimed if it is. Exemption is a personal privilege, and must be claimed by the party entitled or it will be deemed in law as waived, and the constable justified in his act of taking and selling. The authorities to sustain this view are too familiar to require citation. If I am right in these propositions, I think-the learned judge in his charge to the jury was in error when he charged them in the following language: “The constable swears that he levied on this property after the execution was issued to him, without calling upon her; had no conversation with her; and if the property was exempt, she had the right to bring this action' without demand. .No demand was necessary; her right of action was perfect. I charge you, “ that no demand .was neces-' sary under the circumstances of the case, for the reason that the constable swears that before having any conversation with her, after the issuing the execution, he levied on the property; and the property being exempt, that makes him liable, and all who claim title through him.” This charge, I think, is not only erroneous, as containing illegal propositions, but it caused, by implication, a most probable misleading of the jury. It carries with it the idea that the constable is bound to call upon the owners of property and consult with them, before he can dare to perform the duty of making a levy; for this is twice repeated in the extract I
Hor is it the law, as I understand it, that persons who buy as bona fide purchasers at a constable sale, under such circumstances, are liable as wrong-doers, without the necessity of a demand by the plaintiff. The defendant, if not the officer, had a right to rely upon the omission of the plaintiff to assert her claim of exemption. He was not bound to prove title in her brother, Dr. Frazer, or any one else, to defeat her recovery. It was for her, the plaintiff, to prove title in herself, not only, but to prove all the other facts necessary to establish her right to the exemption. The burden was upon her (Tuttle v. Buck, 41 Barb., 417; Griffin v. Sutherland, 14 id., 456); and it was held in Smith v. Hill (22 id., 661), that a party, being present at a sheriff sale, and knowing the circumstances under which the property was sold, and making no objection at the time, or claim, waived his claim, and was estopped from making it afterward. (See, also, Lounsbury v. Depew, 28 Barb., 47, 48; and Hawley v. Griswold, 42 id., and cases cited, on page 23.) The maxim is wise, that a party who is silent when he ought to speak shall not be permitted to speak afterward to the prejudice of those who have been induced to act upon such omission to speak. Roberts, in his treatise on fraud, 130, says “ there is a negative fraud in imposing a false apprehension on another by silence, where silence is treacherously expressive.” (See cases cited in Thompson v. Blanchard, 4 N. Y., 303; Brewster v. Baker, 16 Barb., 613, to the same effect.)
But I think the learned judge was also in error in his charge that not only the officer who levied, but all who claimed title through him, were liable in such an action with
But there is another portion of the charge fully excepted to, to which I cannot lend my assent, either as sound law or as a sound principle of ethics. The case shows that the plaintiff, at and before the sale, and in the presence of the purchaser and bidders at the sale, said she would not lie; the property belonged to her brother. On the trial she swore it was her own. On the subject of this inconsistency, and as to this falsehood, on the one occasion or the other, the learned judge charged the jury as follows: “If the jury consider that the woman, unadvised, resorted to that course in order to carry her boat along, and not intending to lie about it, they have a right to say so.” This may be “ a charity that covers a multitude of sins,” but I don’t think a precedent can be found to sustain it. The law knows no distinction between an unadvised woman and an 'unadvised man, and the judgment in the moral scale is the same with each. A falsehood or fraud by the one is equal to the same fraud or falsehood by the other, and the estoppel and waiver created by the assertion of falsehood or by treacherous or expressive silence in the one case, differs not from the other. And the hypothesis given to the jury, that they had a right to find she did not intend to lie when she openly declared that in what she stated she would not lie, and afterward having sworn that when she said so in effect that she did lie, is giving the jury to understand that they may exercise a looseness in morals and disregard of truth in weighing testimony that appears to me to be dangerous to the cause of justice. I should be for reversing the judgment upon this ground alone.
The plaintiff failed on the trial, .by proof, to bring herself within the law of exemption, but no objection was taken or motion made to nonsuit on that ground, and we must assmne that no error was committed in that regard.
There is another question that arose on the trial which the defendant’s counsel seems to regard as perhaps the most
Judgment reversed.