Connah v. Hale

23 Wend. 462
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 23 Wend. 462 (Connah v. Hale) 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
Connah v. Hale, 23 Wend. 462 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1840).

Opinion

Cowen, J.

By the Court, several exceptions were taken below and most of them repeated here. The counsel for the plaintiff in error insists that, since the revised statutes requiring the intervention of an officer to distrain, trover will not lie for an illegal distress against the landlord. Indeed, it is insisted that trover would not lie either against the party or officer, even before the revised statutes, for the act of taking goods under colour of legal process; because they .were deemed to be in the custody of the law. And especially since the revised statutes, where goods are distrained, it is said the party injured has a perfect remedy by replevin, and should be confined to that.

[ *466 ] *The authority, Wallace v. King, 1 H. Black. 13, cited as questioning the right to bring trover for a wrongful distress, does [465]*465not apply. It relates to cases where the distress was originally lawful, but some irregularity has intervened, such as at common law would have made the party a trespasser ah initio. There, since the statute has confined the party to a special action on the case, courts have very properly held that trover should not be resorted to. No case denies, as is supposed, that it will lie for goods illegally taken under color of process. The case referred to by counsel of Jenner v. Joliffe, 6 Johns. R. 9. and 9 id. 381, was of a legal seizure of the plaintiff’s timber, by an officer at the suit of the defendant ; and yet, even there, the action was finally sustained, by reason that he had improperly interfered, and caused a conversion of part, while it was in the custody of the law. The action Avas said, in such case, to lie either against the principal or his officer. It never Avas seriously questioned that trover Avould lie for a seizure originally unlaAvful, whether under color of process or a Avarrant of distress ; and it has several times been brought and passed entirely Avithout objection, to assert the exemption of property, Avhether from execution or distress. Thus in Woodward v. Murray, 18 Johns. R. 400, the defendant in an execution, brought and was allowed to sustain trover for a cow, under the statute exempting such property from execution; and in Simpson v. Hartop, Willes, 512, and Gorton v. Falkner, 4 T. R. 565, as well as in several other like cases which I will by and by cite in another connection, trover Avas brought and passed without objection, on principles precisely the same as the plaintiff beloAV relied on in the case at bar. The plaintiffs’ goods were, as they alleged, distrained for the rent of others under circumstances Avhich exempted them from distress, although they Ayere on the demised premises at the time. And in Simpson v. Ilartop the plaintiff recovered. There can be no doubt, that in all cases of taking goods without right at the time, whether by officers or others, trover, trespass de bonis, and in general replevin are concurrent remedies. Indeed it is rather the latter action, of which the laAV is jealous, and Avhich it therefore withholds *from a defendant in an execution or attachment; [ *466 ] not even this strong action, however, Avhere his property taken is exempt. 2 R. S. 130, 2d ed. § 5. The argument that the same volume, p. 432, by expressly giving replevin for a Avrongful distress, intended to detract from remedies which existed before, derives no'color from the language used there. It is, in this respect, a mere affirmance of the common law. But that even the common law is too narrow for the action, we were finally referred to Anscomb v. Shore, 1 Camp. 285. That again is where the original distress Avas lawful. It was a distress of cattle damage feasant; and the judge held that no action would lie for detaining them, where the tender of amends Ayas not made till after the cattle Avere impounded; but in the note to that very case, id. p. 289, Coke is cited as saying, that tender before distress makes the distress tortious; tender after distress and before impounding makes the detainer and not the taking wrongful. Tender after [466]*466the impounding makes neither the one nor the other wrongful.” I want an authority that for a taking originally tortious, whether under color of dis-training or any thing else, either trover or trespass will not lie. Vid. Bac. Abr. tit. Trespass, (A). In Van Sickler v. Jacob’s, 14 Johns. R. 434, trespass was brought by a tenant for distraining his cooking utensils which he claimed to be exempt by statute, and no one thought of objecting to the form of action. It failed on another ground ; but in a like case, Hall v. Penny, 11 Wendell, 44, arising from a levy by execution, trespass de bonis was allowed without objection, and the plaintiff recovered. It must be so, from the nature of the thing. The process or distress warrant confers no authority to take the goods ; and the case is the same, in legal effect, as if the party had openly proceeded by his own naked hand.

It seems to be thought that an actual manucaption of goods is necessary to constitute a tortious taking. Rut the contrary has often been held. Any exercise or claim of dominion, though by mere words, the speaker having the goods within his power, may amount to such a taking as to warrant an action of trespass. Merely making an inventory and threatening to remove goods, which is prevented by another giving a receipt for them, [ *467 ] though they were not *touched by the officer, is sufficient. Wintringham v. Lafoy, 7 Cowen, 735. And see the cases cited and commented on by Sutherland, J. in Reynolds v. Shuler, 5 Cowen, 326. There are several subsequent cases in this court, that a mere claim of dominion, an intention being indicated to interfere with the goods under pretence of any right or authority, amounts to a constructive trespass. Phillips v. Hall, 8 Wendell, 610, 613, and the eases there cited. Allen v. Crary, 10 id. 349. Wall v. Osborn, 12 id. 39, 40. And vid. Fonda v. Van Horne, 15 id. 633.

In the case at bar, the property was distinctly levied on, an inventory and appraisal had, one of the boxes was opened ; all this was followed by the defendant’s directions to have the goods detained, and a declaration that he meant to sell them, the plaintiff, in the meantime, submitting to such control. There could not well be a clearer trespass short of an actual taking and removal of the whole. Let it be conceded that neither the defendant nor any body else for him, or acting under his authority or pretending to do so, ever touched more than one of the boxes. Such was the evidence undoubtedly. All idea of holding on was abandoned by the officer ; and no physical interference imputable to the defendant, or any one else, at least as to seventeen out of eighteen Y>f the boxes ; yet I confess I had thought the notion of moral or constructive trespass too well settled, to believe that it would, at this day, be even mooted by learned counsel. It seems to me it should be considered at rest in the mind of every one. Yet the argument continues to be thought plausible, at least, that, to constitute a trespass, there must be something which shall literally satisfy the formal allegation vi et armis, &c., and [467]

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Bluebook (online)
23 Wend. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connah-v-hale-nysupct-1840.