Clark v. Weaver

24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 481
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 481 (Clark v. Weaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Weaver, 24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 481 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Hardin, J.:

The referee has found that in April, 1877, the sheriff made a levy on an execution in favor of Blasier, and against one Alonzo Clark, father of plaintiff, upon seven cows “then and there the property of the plaintiff in this action.” (2.) Also that the sheriff was informed by the plaintiff the cows were the property of this plaintiff. (3.) That “notwithstanding thereof the sheriff threatened to remove said cows unless a receiptor was given for the same, that plaintiff thereupon signed and executed and delivered to tbe sheriff the receipt for them ; thereupon the cows were then and there left by the sheriff and not-removed.”

The receipt executed 12th of March, 1877, acknowledged the receipt of the property “ so levied upon by the sheriff, from the sheriff, ‘ and stated ’ and hereby promise and undertake to return the same and every part thereof to the said sheriff, on demand or pay the above judgment and sheriff fees.”

He also finds, viz.: “That in a week or so thereafter the said deputy sheriff, said Blasier, and E. J. Lawton, coroner of Oneida county, were at the place of plaintiff’s where said cows were ; the said deputy and Blasier were there wffh a view to sell said cows on said execution ; that this plaintii and there informed the said deputy all the cows were in tue barn, then on the premises where the parties were; that said deputy did not demand the cows on said receipt. JSTor “did the said plaintiff personally deliver the cows to said deputy, except to state the cows tuere there ; that said deputy túrned one of the cows out of the barn, and was proceeding to sell the same by virtue of said execution, when said coroner Lawton then and there served the papers for the commencement of this action on both defendants, and no further or other sale of said cows took place at that time.”

It appears by the case that the plaintiff offered to prove that the deputy sheriff’ on the day of sale, and before this suit was brought, gave back to the plaintiff the receipt. This evidence was objected to by the defendants as incompetent, improper and immaterial.

. The referee sustained the objections and excluded the evidence, [485]*485holding that the deputy sheriff could not give up the receipt to the prejudice of the plaintiff in the execution and judgment, and the plaintiff had an exception.

The sheriff had asked if the cows wore there, and was told, as was the fact, that they were, before the receipt was demanded and before it was delivered back as stated in the offer. There was also an offer to show that plaintiff declined at first to sign the receipt, and “ that on being then and there assured by such deputy that it would not have the effect to prejudice his rights, * * * and that no advantage whatever should be taken of it if the cows were present when wanted for sale — that on the faith of such assurance the plaintiff signed the^same.” It was excluded; the plaintiff excepted.

The referee found, as a conclusion of law, “ that by the receipt the plaintiff is estopped as against these defendants from setting up or claiming in this action the said property was his,” and, thereupon, he dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint.

It appeared that the execution creditor, Blasier, had indemnified the sheriff, and was aiding and directing the levy and proposed sale of the property.

The learned referee states that he was influenced in his decision of this case by the cases which he cites. 0 The first is Dezell v. Odell (3 Hill, 217).

In that case a levy had been made, a receipt'given to the officer, the property was not produced and a suit was brought, and the receiptor sought to defend upon an averment and proof that he owned the property. The court held that the defendant, the receiptor, was estopped, the majority of the court being of the opinion that the principle of estoppel in pais was applicable.

Judge Co wen, who delivered the prevailing opinion in that case, said: “ It may be conceded that had the defendant’s claim been interposed at the time of the levy, and he had signed the receipt in terms, without prejudice to his rights, the question would have been open. “The creditor would have been put upon his guard and enabled to seek for other property on finding that the debtor had no title to that in question.” He then proceeds to state that the conduct of the receiptor had been such as to influence the creditor and the sheriff, and that in the absence of fraud or gross [486]*486mistake shown by defendant to have been practiced, there was an estoppel, and he adds, “ the officer was, when he came to sell, for the first time apprised that the defendant had title.”

The quotations made indicate how essentially the case differed from the one before us.

The next case to which the referee refers to support his decision is that of the People v. Reeder (25 N. Y., 303).

That was a case whore the sheriff had taken a receipt for goods and demanded them of the receiptor, and brought his action and obtained a judgment, and it was held that when the execution creditor brought an action against the sheriff, he was estopped from setting up that the goods did not belong to the judgment-debtor.

The sheriff had the benefit of an estoppel against the receiptor and obtained his judgment, and, therefore, was liable for the execution debt. That case. does not aid the defendant here; for the receipt contained an admission that the property belonged to the judgment-debtor. (See opinion of Denio, J., 303.)

The next case is that of Cornell v. Dakin (38 N. Y., 253). Opinion by Dwight, J.

The sheriff took a receipt in that case and made a demand for the property, and there was a refusal to deliver, and it was held the receiptor was liable, and that he could not in such action set up title to the property in a third person. He had contracted to return it, his compact was founded on a sufficient consideration, viz., the surrender of the property, and that “the defendant must be supposed to have made it voluntarily, with his eyes open, with full knowledge of its meaning and effect.” His covenant was absolute and positive to return the property or to pay the judgment. Nothing but the act of God, or of the public enemy, could discharge his liability upon it.

In Diossy v. Morgan (17 Alb. Law Jour., 491) the Court of Appeals held that a party who had as dofendant given a replevin undertaking, which recited that the property had been taken from his possession, and asked a re-delivery, was estopped from setting up that the property had not been in his possession.

The admission in that case was one as to the possession, and only from denying the possession so admitted was the estoppel.

[487]*487In the case before us we find facts and features which distinguish it from any of those alluded to.

(1.) The plaintiff gave notice at the time of the levy that he owned the property.

(2.) The sheriff assured the party, who was asked to give a receipt, that it would not have the effect to prejudice his claim to or ownership of the property.

(3.) There was an “ assurance that no advantage whatever should be talcen of it,

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Related

Bookstaver v. . Jayne
60 N.Y. 146 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Cornell v. . Dakin
38 N.Y. 253 (New York Court of Appeals, 1868)
Carpenter v. Stilwell & Ambrose
12 Barb. 128 (New York Supreme Court, 1851)
Lounsbury v. Depew
28 Barb. 44 (New York Supreme Court, 1858)
Welland Canal Co. v. Hathaway
8 Wend. 480 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-weaver-nysupct-1879.