Angell v. Simmons

10 R.I. 418
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 R.I. 418 (Angell v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angell v. Simmons, 10 R.I. 418 (R.I. 1873).

Opinion

Beavton, C. J.

The declaration in this case is in trespass against thq defendants Russell A. Simmons and Samuel Shippee. The first count charges that they worried,' chased, and drove the plaintiff’s cattle from the plaintiff’s close to a place unknown to the plaintiff, whereby said cattle were injured and the plaintiff put to great trouble and expense to find them..

The second count charges that they distrained the plaintiff’s *420 cattle, and put them in their own private premises, and so illegally kept them shut up for a long time, whereby said cattle were injured and the plaintiff compelled to pay the sum of $22.40 to obtain them.

The third count charges that the defendants took and drove the plaintiff’s cattle and converted them to said defendants’ own use.

The pleas of defendants were: 1st. Not guilty. 2d. That as to the driving said cattle and keeping them for the space of time mentioned, until the plaintiff was obliged to. pay the sum of $22.40, that the cattle were wrongfully on the common damage feasant, and that the defendant was a freeholder and qualified elector in the town of Foster, and took and distrained said cattle, and drove and impounded the same in a jaublic town pound in said Foster, as he had a legal right to do.

3. The plea as to the seizing, taking, driving away, keeping, and impounding the plaintiff’s cattle, says that at the time of taking and impounding the same in said declaration mentioned, said cattle were running at large in violation of the statute, and that the defendant was then a public officer in said Foster, namely, a surveyor of highways, and, by virtue of his office, seized and carefully drove and impounded said cattle according to the statute in such case made and provided.

The plaintiff joined issue on the plea of not guilty, and by his first replication says, that at the time of the trespass mentioned in the declaration, the cattle of the plaintiff were not wrongfully on said common damage feasant, and tenders an issue in which defendant joins.

The plaintiff replies, secondly, and says, that at the time of taking the said cattle and driving and impounding the same, the said cattle were not running at large in violation of the statutes of the State of Rhode Island, and this, he prays, may be inquired of, and in which defendant joins issue.

The only questions upon the issue made by the replications are: 1st. Whether the plaintiff’s cattle, at the time of the trespass, taking, and driving, were wrongfully in the common damage feasant; and, 2d. Whether said cattle were running at large, in violation of the statute.

But the trial before the jury in the Court of Common Pleas *421 seems to have been upon the general issue of not guilty, and the question to have been mainly whether the impounding, as alleged in the declaration, was in private premises, or wholly in the public town pound.

And the question seems also to have been whether the defendant, having properly distrained the cattle, kept and detained them on his own premises, as a pound, and unnecessarily and unreasonably delayed to deliver them into the custody of the keeper of the public town pound, where alone they could be lawfully impounded.

The plaintiff claimed that if the'cattle, though properly taken into the custody of defendant, were kept over night upon private premises, though finally driven to the public pound, the impounding was illegal.

The judge who held the court was asked so to charge. This he declined tp do, and did charge the jury, in effect, that although the defendant did keep them upon private premises over night, and in the morning drove them to and delivered them to the pound-keeper, the impounding would be lawful if he did what he reasonably could to get them to the pound as early and as safely as circumstances would allow.

A person who first lawfully distrains cattle is entitled to retain them in custody until he can deliver them into the' custody of the pound-keeper. He is entitled so to keep them as will enable him surely to deliver them to such keeper. Were he in danger of losing that custody by driving them in the darkness of the night, when it would be easy for them to escape, and when there was reasonable danger that they would, we do not see that he might not keep that custody by shutting them up until they could be safely driven. He would have no right unreasonably to delay and without necessity keep them from the pound. His duty is to use all reasonable diligence, and in good faith to deliver them at the pound without endangering the custody which he has.

None of the cases cited require more than this, and we think the question given to the jury requires so much of the distrainor, and that the question was properly left to the jury to determine if the defendant did use all that care and diligence which reasonably he could, and in good faith to deliver the plaintiff’s cattle at the pound.

*422 Upon that question the jury have considered the evidence, and have found that the- defendant did what he reasonably could to get the cattle to the pound as soon and as safely as the circumstances would allow him to do. This exception must be overruled.

There was another exception urged here, viz., that the answer is filed by one defendant only, and the judgment is in favor of both. The bill of exceptions from the Court of Common Pleas contains no such exception, and it does not appear to have been taken in that court. It is not properly before us.

Exceptions overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
10 R.I. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angell-v-simmons-ri-1873.