Boston & Maine Railroad v. Small

27 A. 349, 85 Me. 462, 1893 Me. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 31, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 27 A. 349 (Boston & Maine Railroad v. Small) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston & Maine Railroad v. Small, 27 A. 349, 85 Me. 462, 1893 Me. LEXIS 48 (Me. 1893).

Opinion

Emery, J.

The plaintiff corporation as a common carrier, had in its possession on one of its side tracks, in Biddeford, a box freight car laden with merchandise for various parties, and locked and sealed. While the car was in this situation and condition, the defendant, a deputy sheriff for York county, armed with a search warrant from the Biddeford municipal' court under B. S., c. 27, § 40, broke the lock and door, and entered the car in the night time, soon after midnight. His warrant commanded him to "therein search for intoxicating liquors, and if there found to seize and safely keep the same with the vessels in which they are contained, until final action and decision bo had thereon.” He did find in the car one barrel of intoxicating liquor,— viz: a barrel of alcohol,— but did not seize it, being of the opinion that it was not intended for unlawful sale. He, however, made upon the warrant the.erroneous return that he searched the car and found no intoxicating liquor. The plaintiff thereupon brought this action of trespass for the breaking into its car through the lock and door. The defendant has pleaded a justification under the warrant above described.

[464]*464Assuming the complaint and warrant and the search under them to have been in other respects legal and regular, the question arises whether the intentional omission " to seize and safely keep,” &c., the intoxicating liquors found in the car by the officer invalidates his authority under the warrant and leaves him a trespasser.

Though often obscured in earlier and ruder times, it is a distinctive feature of our common law system of jurisprudence that it so jealously guards the liberty and property of the citizen against the capricious, arbitrary or extra legal acts of government officers, and at the same time insists upon the full performance of their legal duty. English history abounds with instances of the assertion of this principle. Two conspicuous instances are the beheading of one king for over-stepping the law, and the expulsion, some fifty years later, of another king partly for refusing to execute certain laws. The principle is now imbedded in the fundamental law of our republics.

Imbued with this spirit, our law requires of every ministerial officer assuming to execute a statute or legal process against the person or property of the citizen, a strict observance of every provision of the statute and of every lawful command in the process. The law permits to such an officer no discretion in this respect. If he once begin, he must , execute the process, the whole process, and nothing but the process. Many extracts from judicial opinions could be quoted stating this rule as strongly and comprehensively. One distinguished jurist has used judicially "the following language : "A man who seizes the property or arrests the person of another by legal process, or other equivalent authority conferred upon him by law, can only justify himself by a strict compliance with the requirements of such process or authority. If he fails to execute or return the process as thereby required, he may not perhaps in the strictest sense be said to become a trespasser ab initio; but he is often called such, for his whole justification fails, and he stands as if he never had any authority to take the property, and therefore appears to have been a trespasser from the beginning.” Gray, [465]*465J., in Brock v. Stimson, 108 Mass. 521. By substituting the word "injure” for the word "seize” in the above quotation the language of Justice Gray would be literally applicable to this case.

There would seem to be no difference in principle between civil and criminal processes in this respect, and hence illustrations may properly be taken from either class of cases. In Blanchard v. Dow, 32 Maine, 557, a tax collector regularly sold cattle of the plaintiff upon a tax warrant. He omitted afterward to render "an account in writing of the sale and charges” as required by the statute and his warrant. It was held that this omission deprived him of the protection of his warrant. In Carter v. Allen, 59 Maine, 296, a tax collector under the same circumstances did render the account in writing and tender the surplus; but the statement of account proved to be incorrect. It was held that this error vitiated the officer’s immunity. In Ross v. Philbrick, 39 Maine, 29; Brackett v. Vining, 49 Maine, 356; and Smith v. Gates, 21 Pick. 55, it ivas held that an omission by an officer to execute a command in the precept at the precise time named therein, invalidated his authority and made him liable as a trespasser to those with whose property he had interfered under his precept. In the last named case, Smith v. Gates, there was a variation of only twenty minutes. In Tubbs v. Tukey, 3 Cush. 438, an officer arrested the plaintiff on a criminal process on Sunday, and committed him to jail. On the following Monday morning instead of taking the plaintiff before the police court, as required by law to do, the officer assumed to discharge the plaintiff from arrest. It was held that the omission to take the plaintiff before the court took away from the officer all justification for the arrest. In Russell v. Hanscomb, 15 Gray, 166, a fish warden as authorized by statute took a seine which ivas illegally set. He did not, however, as required by statute begin a legal proceeding for the forfeiture. In the words of Shaw, C. J., the court held that the warden’s " failure to prosecute was a departure from his authority, and in legal effect deprived him of his justifica[466]*466tion.” In Brock v. Stimson, 108 Mass. 520, a police officer by authority of a statute arrested the plaintiff for being drunk and disorderly in a public place; but instead of taking him before the court for trial, as further required by statute, he released the plaintiff from arrest as soon as he recovered from his intoxication. It was held that this disobedience of the statute took away all protection under the statute. In Phillips v. Fadden, 125 Mass. 198, upon a similar state of facts the proposition was again asserted that, if an officer fails to do all that the law requires him to do, his whole justification fails. It has also been held and is a familiar principle, that the omission by the officer to obey the final and formal command to make return of the precept, under which he assumes to act, invalidates his authority under the precept, and renders him liable to an action for anything done under it. Williams v. Babbitt, 14 Gray, 141; Williams v. Ives, 25 Conn; 568 ; Dehm v. Hinman, 56 Conn. 320.

In the Six Carpenters’ case, 8 Coke, 146, in which the doctrine of trespass ab initio seems to have been first formally expounded, it was said that the reason for holding a person acting under authority of law to be a trespasser ab initio by any subsequent abuse of such authority, was that his subsequent illegality showed that he began with an unlawful intent. This dictum has been often repeated in various forms. It seems, however, to be artificial and even fictitious. An officer may often, in fact, begin with the best and most lawful intent and yet forfeit his protection by subsequent misconduct. The more solid and sure foundation for such a rule would seem to be public policy.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 349, 85 Me. 462, 1893 Me. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-maine-railroad-v-small-me-1893.