197 F. 304 | 4th Cir. | 1912
This is an action at law to recover damages of the defendants below, Floyd McDonald and the Citizens’ Trust & Guaranty Company of West Virginia. The former had been sheriff of Randolph county, W. Va., and the said Trust Company was the surety on his official bond. The declaration filed by the plaintiff alleged that the said McDonald, as such sheriff, did not observe and faithfully perform the conditions of his official bond, but made default therein, the breach assigned being that on the 16th day of November, 1907, Halfpenny & Hamilton instituted a certain suit in equity in the circuit court of Randolph county, W. Va., against H. W. Tate and C. M. McDivitt, partners doing business as Tate & Mc-Divitt. and that pending said suit an order of attachment was duly issued against the property of Ii. W. Tate and C. M. McDivitt for a balance of about $3,500 for money claimed to be due from them to Halfpenny & Hamilton, and also for $4,000 damages. Said attachment was served on certain garnishees; the proceedings thereunder not being material in the disposition of this writ of error. On November 23, 1907, at the instance of the plaintiff below, a second attachment for a like purpose was duly issued against the property of said Tate & McDivitt, which was placed in the hands of a deputy for said sheriff, who made a return of the same in these words:
“Nov. 27th, 3907, levied within order oí attachment upon all the stacks of lumber consisting of oak and chestnut at the It. It. Siding at Fisher in Roaring Oreek District, and upon all the stacks of lumber at what is known as the Andy Durkin ‘set’ in Roaring Creek District, and on Nov. 28th, 3907, levied upon all the lumber at the siding at Kingsville Station in Roaring Oreek District. consisting of oak, poplar, chestnut, etc., and took all of said lumber in my possession. O. M. Marstiller, Dept, for Floyd McDonald, S. R. 0.”
The declaration further alleged that on the 11th day of July, 1908, the circuit court of Randolph county entered a decree abating said attachment, and that from that decree Halfpenny & Hamilton appealed to the Supreme Court of West Virginia, which court on the 9th day of March, 1909, reversed that decree, and adjudged that the attachment was sued out on good and sufficient grounds, and that the property so attached, or a sufficient portion thereof, should be sold to satisfy the sum of $3,736.14, with interest and costs, subject to credits for such sums as might be collected from the garnishees before mentioned; also, it is alleged in the declaration that the lumber so levied upon was amply sufficient to have fully paid plaintiff’s entire claim and costs; that to satisfy the sum due plaintiff the sheriff
With the permission of the court and in conformity with the usual practice, the defendant McDonald appeared and filed his plea of “nil debet,” on which issue was joined, and the case duly tried! to a jury, which rendered a verdict for the defendants.
The plaintiff moved to set aside said verdict, .which the court after argument and due consideration refused to do. During the trial the plaintiff excepted to certain rulings of the court, and tendered bills of exceptions which were duly signed. The instructions to the jury asked for by the plaintiff were given by the court, as was also the instruction requested by the defendant McDonald. To the judgment entered on the verdict so rendered this writ of error was awarded.
The instruction given by the court at the instance of the defendant,to which the plaintiff objected, and which is involved in this writ, reads as follows:
“Tbe court instructs the jury that an officer who levies an order of attachment upon personal property is not an insurer thereof; and therefore unless the jury believes from the evidence that the lumber levied upon under the order of attachment of November 23, 1907, and particularly specified in the sheriff’s return thereon, or any material part thereof, was, because of the negligence, or want of reasonable care and diligence on the part of the defendant McDonald; unlawfully taken and removed out of and from the jurisdiction of the circuit court of Randolph county, then the jury should find for the defendant; and the court further instructs the jury that the burden of proving that the defendant McDonald failed to use ordinary care and diligence to protect the said lumber levied upon and taken into his possession, and the removal of said lumber or any material part thereof from, the possession of the said defendant and out of the jurisdiction of said circuit court are upon the plaintiff.”
The testimony in this case is uncertain, contradictory, confusing, and not of that character that would justify a jury in returning a verdict for damages against any one. It fails to show the quantity of lumber levied upon, it does not specify the amount of lumber removed after the levy was made, it fails to show whether or not all of the lumber removed was from the places and the stacks of lumber levied on, or from the places and stacks not levied on. The evidence is most unsatisfactory — in fact, is pure guess work — as to the number of feet of lumber covered by the attachment and taken into his possession by the officer making the levy. The fact that the return made by the officer making the levy was not explicit, and, did not definitely describe the property, is immaterial. There was no objection to said return when it, was made and filed, and the.officer making it was not
The instruction given by the court was, under the circumstances disclosed by tlie testimony in this case, most favorable to the plaintiff below, and the failure to recover tlie damages claimed must be attributed to the weakness of his case as presented to the jury — whatever in fact its strength may have been — and not to the instruction given by the court, with which we find no fault. The assignments of error are without merit. We find no error in the judgment complained of.
Affirmed.