2 Me. 270 | Me. | 1823
delivered the opinion of the Court, at the ensuing August term in Oxford, as follows.
No case, in all respects similar to the present, has been cited on either side; yet we think that the principles which are established in some of those which have been cited, lead to an easy and satisfactory decision of the case at bar. Though the action is against the sheriff, the exceptions show that it was commenced to recover damages for an alleged wrong of Sioett, one of his deputies.
In this state, a deputy sheriff is an officer under oath, having rights and being subject to. liabilities, not only to the sheriff, but to third persons who may have employed him in his official-capacity. His character essentially differs from that of a sheriff’s servant or deputy in England. In this particular, therefore, English decisions are not applicable; nor can the course of proceeding which may be proper there, in the adjustment of disputes among the inferior officers of the sheriff, be a rule in the settlement of questions as to attachments, and their priority, made by deputy sheriffs under our laws, and according to our usages. The decisions of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, at the time this State was a part of that Commonwealth, furnish us with valuable commentaries upon our laws, and seem to have established the principles by which this cause must be decided.
By our law, if a deputy sheriff has been guilty of misconduct in his office, by neglecting his duty, or violating the rights of a debtor or creditor, the injured party may, at his election, bring his action directly against the deputy, or against the sheriff; and may, in the latter case, charge the wrong generally, as committed by the sheriff, and on trial prove it to have been committed by the deputy, for whose act he is answerable; — or he may, in his action against the sheriff, declare specially, alleging the wrong to have been committed by the deputy. The cases cited by the defendant’s counsel, from 11 and 12 Mass. and also Campbell v. Phillips, 17 Mass. 244, clearly establish this point.
If the difference, in neither of the foregoing particulars, is material, the plaintiff’s exception must be sustained. By lavr the sheriff is answerable for the official acts of his deputies, and if the wrong complained of had been committed by the deputy Szvett, against any person, except another deputy of the defendant, it is not contended that the action would not be maintainable. It appears that Walker made the first attachment. Walker was then entitled and bound to hold the property safely; no other deputy could afterwards attach it, because he could have no right to the possession of it. Another creditor, by placing his writ in the hands of the deputy who made the first attachment, might have caused it to be attached by him, subject to the first attachment; and perhaps if such second writ were placed in the hands of the sheriff himself, the goods might be considered as attached by him, subject to the prior attachment made by his deputy. Be this as it may, no act of the sheriff, or any other deputy, can defeat or impair the rights of the first attaching deputy. In the present action, the sheriff is not sued for his own act, but the act of one of his deputies, for which, if wrongful, he is by law liable to the injured party, and the -deputy is liable over to him.
¿Y'ote. In this cause Pe.ebi.e J. gave no opinion.