Bank of Hartford County v. Waterman

26 Conn. 324
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 26 Conn. 324 (Bank of Hartford County v. Waterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Hartford County v. Waterman, 26 Conn. 324 (Colo. 1857).

Opinion

Storrs, C. J.

This action is founded on the neglect of an officer to make a valid attachment of real estate and a false return that he had made such an attachment, whereby the plaintiffs, when they undertook to enforce their supposed lien by the levy of an execution, to their surprise, failed to obtain satisfaction and lost their debt. The defendant meets these averments with a plea of the statute of limitations, which restricts the right of suit for such injuries to a period of two years next after it shall accrue.

Ignorance of his rights on the part of the person against whom the statute has begun to run, will not suspend its operation. He may discover his injury too late to take advantage of the appropriate remedy. Such is one of the occasional hardships necessarily incident to a law arbitrarily making legal remedies contingent on mere lapse of time. Brown v. Howard, 2 Brod. & B., 73. Sims v. Brutton, 1 Eng. L. & Eq. R., 446. Short v. McCarthy, 3 B. & Ald., 626. Blair v. Bromley, 5 Hare, 542. Battley v. Faulkner, 3 B. & Ald , 288. Strong equitable considerations in favor of the present plaintiffs seem, however, to grow out of the fact, that they were actually betrayed into ignorance of their rights by the wrongful acts of the defendant himself; that they were misled by the very record to which they might and should rightfully refer for knowledge of their rights, and of which the defendant was himself the author, having verified it under his official oath. It is palpably unjust for the defendant to set up the statute as a defence under such circumstances ; to do so is in one sense taking advantage of his own wrong. Yet it is difficult to see that he is not, by the clear provisions of the statute itself, protected in so doing: nor are we aware of any well established doctrine by which a party in a court of law can be prohibited, on the score of [331]*331equitable estoppel, from defending himself under a public statute, designed to be of universal operation in the matter of legal remedies. Lord Campbell properly suggested, relative to a controversy not unlike the present, that “hard cases must not make bad law.” East India Co. v. Paul, 1 Eng. L. & Eq. R. 44, 48. At the same time, if the dictum of Lord Mansfield, (Bree v Holbech, Doug. R. 655,) that “ there may be cases which fraud will take out of the statute of limitations,” were confirmed by direct adjudication, we should be reluctant to withhold the application of the doctrine in the present instance. (See Blair v. Bromley, supra.)

These views are, however, immaterial to either party; as the cause of action, in our judgment, accrued—that is to say became complete and perfect—within two years next previous to the commencement of the present suit.

Whether the true basis of the injury eventually suffered by the plaintiffs was the neglect to serve the process, or the false return, it can not be useful to determine, as neither of these facts singly, or both together, in our opinion, would be enough to constitute a cause of action. No right to sue became lodged in the plaintiffs until a certain consequence resulted from one or both of these breaches of duty by the officer.

If this be so, that the damnifying consequences of the defendant’s violation of duty are an essential ingredient in the plaintiffs’ cause of action, the statute of limitations can not begin to run until this cause of action becomes complete. The consequences are not, in such a case, mere aggravating circumstances, enhancing a legal injury already suffered or inflicted ; nor are they the mere development of such a previous injury, through which development the party is enabled for the first time to ascertain or appreciate the fact of the injury; but, inasmuch as no legal wrong existed before, they are an indispensable element of the injury itself, and must therefore themselves fix, or may fix, the period when the statute of limitations shall commence to run. Authorities can hardly strengthen a proposition so manifestly just. If we are wrong, some strictly legal injuries might never for a [332]*332moment be capable of redress. For instance, so much time might accrue between the injurious act of bringing a vexatious suit and its final termination in favor of the defendant therein, that, if the original act were the entire gravamen of the latter’s suit against the wrong-doer, he might be barred of his remedy before his right to redress ever vested in him for a single hour. But authorities are not wanting on this point. When the injury, however slight, is complete at the time of the act, the statute period commences ; (Wordsworth v. Harley, 1 B. & Ad. 391;) but when the act is not legally injurious until certain consequences occur, the statute begins to run from the consequential injury. (Roberts v. Read, 16 East, 215.) In Gillon v. Bodington, (1 Car. & P., 541,) it is agreed that the language of the English statute was even somewhat strained to make its construction comport with this very just principle,—the limitation, by that enactment, taking date from the “ fact committed,” and the court extending the meaning of this term so as to make consequential damage one essential part of the fact referred to.

It only remains, therefore, to determine • whether a neglect to serve mesne process, or a false return of such process, is actionable in itself, or whether it becomes so only when a real injury follows from it. No distinction can be drawn between a neglect to serve and a false return in deciding the point presented. (Lord Denman, in Wylie v. Birch, 4 A. & E., 566.)

The case of Planck v. Anderson, 5 T. R., 37, early settled the doctrine, that when an escape on mesne process took place, the only remedy of the plaintiff was an action on the case for the consequential injury, and that “ if no damage be sustained, the creditor has no cause of action.” (Buller, J.)

Of the contrary decision of Barker v. Green, (2 Bing., 317,) we shall take occasion to speak hereafter. After the latter decision, in 1836, Lord Abinger, at the exchequer chamber, in a colloquy with counsel, took strong ground against the idea that an officer was at all events liable in nominal damages for neglect to serve mesne process. (Brown [333]*333v. Jarvis, 1 Mees. & Wels., 708.) Two years after, the same court unequivocally denied the right of a plaintiff to subject an officer for an escape on mesne process, unless he had sustained actual damage or delay of his suit thereby. (Williams v. Mostyn, 4 Mees. & Wels., 145.) They expressly disapprove Barker v. Green, suggesting, perhaps incorrectly, that it is loosely reported. Lord Denman, while delivering the judgment of the court of Queen’s Bench in 1839, used this language: No damage is stated, unless some legal damage necessarily results from the neglect of the sheriff [to arrest on mesne process.] We do not think that any such damage does necessarily result.” That is to say, the act is not in itself legally injurious.

The supreme court of New Hampshire early decided, that a sheriff is not liable to an action for an escape on mesne process, if he have the body at the return of the writ. (Cady v. Huntington, 1 N. Hamp., 138.) In Clark v. Smith,

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Bluebook (online)
26 Conn. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-hartford-county-v-waterman-conn-1857.