Delaplane v. Crenshaw

15 Va. 457
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Va. 457 (Delaplane v. Crenshaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaplane v. Crenshaw, 15 Va. 457 (Va. 1860).

Opinion

ESE, J.

These cases have been argued together, and from their nature and character may properly be considered in immediate connection. I propose to consider, first, the action of trover in which the right of the inspector to appropriate to his own use, the flour drawn by him from the barrel in the process of inspection, called the ‘ ‘draft flour,” is the subject of controversy.

This right is sought to be sustained upon two grounds:

1. The long continued usage or custom of the inspectors of flour in this state to retain the draft flour as a part of the compensation for their services.

2. The recognition of this custom in acts of assembly and the sanction thus given to it by the legislature.

If there could he in Virginia, a legal, valid usage or custom the effect of which is to operate per se, as an exception to the general rules of the common law, and to vest a right which could not be claimed under them but must be claimed expressly against them, T should yet hold that such a custom when invoked for the benefit of a public functionary by transferring to him a portion of the goods of the citizen with which he is called upon to deal in the discharge of his office by way of additional compensation or perquisite, over and above what the law expressly provides, would be bad as being unreasonable, unjust and contrary to the policy of our laws. It would be unjust and unreasonable that a public officer having a specified duty to i>erfom in relation to the property of others, for a prescribed fee, should the discharge of that duty acquire a right not only to the fee allowed, *but also to a part of the property itself. It thus makes him the sole judge of the compensation which he shall receive. There is not even the pretense of a contract which might be said to be made with reference to the custom. The manufacturer who designs his flour for shipment has no choice in regard to the inspection. He is required by law to have such flour inspected, and is subject to a heavy penalty if he shall export or ship it without such inspection. He pays the fee because required by law to do so, but in no respect does he stand in the relation of a contracting party to the inspector. Now it is well settled that a custom to take or have any thing from another man’s land, or for a profit a prendre, is bad. Gateward’s Case, 6 Rep. 60; Grimstead v. Marlow, 4 T. R. 717; Blewett v. Tregonning, 30 Eng. C. L. R. 151; Wilson v. Willis, 7 East's R. 121; Race v. Ward, 82 Eng. C. L. R. 700; Waters v. Lilley, 4 Pick. R. 145; Perley v. Langley, 7 New Hamp. R. 233; Kenyon v. Nichols, 1 Rh. Isl. R. 106. In the case last cited, the claim was of a custom for all the citizens to take sea weed thrown up upon the shore, but it was considered to be a claim to have an interest or profit a prendre in the land of another, and as in the other cases, a custom to sustain such a claim was held bad. And no difference in principle is perceived between such a custom, and one to appropriate part of the personal chattels of another, against his will and without his consent, and without any consideration whatever. It is not an easement, or even a profit that is claimed, but a portion of the principal subject itself; and it seems where the claim is destructive of the subject matter it is held bad even if the party setting- up the custom does not claim to carry away and appropriate it ’ to his own use. Bland v. Lipscombe, 82 Eng. C. L. R. 712, n. It is but a petitio principii to say that the inspector may appropriate the draft flour to his own use because he *may destroy it or throw it away. If it be conceded that to “inspect” means more than to make mere ocular examination, and that the inspector is authorized to bake a portion of the flour into bread, or subject it to [884]*884a chemical test, still that would not authorize him to take away any more than is necessary for that purpose, nor even that for his own use and benefit. Taking' away the draft flour is no part of the inspection, for that may be made as well whether the inspector appropriates it to himself, or restores it to the owner.

The practice of millers to take toll for grinding gives no countenance to this custom. The cases are in no respect parallel. The shipper of flour has no option ; he must have his flour inspected and pay the fees without any thing in the nature of a contract between himself and the inspector. The owner of grain may or may not have it ground at his pleasure, and if he do it is matter of contract between himself and the miller that the toll is yielded. They may agree that the compensation for grinding shall be in money or other thing, instead. Nor is there any real force in the suggestion however plausible it may seem, that the inspector may keep the draft flour for the purpose of vindicating his judgment, if he should be sued for a false brand. It is impossible to believe that such a motive could have been the origin of this custom. No case, I apprehend, has ever occurred in which such an instrument of evidence has been resorted to, nor is it at all likely that ever the flour drawn from a barrel by an inspector was retained for any such purpose. In point of fact, the practice has been universal for the inspectors to mix the flour thus drawn in a common bulk and to sell or otherwise dispose of it. And moreover the gist of 'any action against an inspection for a false brand, would be the honest}’, and not the absolute correctness of the judgment which he had pronounced.

*This custom, as it seems to me, is ' also bad, because in conflict with the general policy of the law, and this in several respects. It is certainly a marked feature in our system of offices that the compensation of public functionaries shall be fixed and certain. It is a great and pervading principle of our Code and is essential to the purity and impartiality of the government. The idea of a “perquisite of office” in the sense of a fee or allowance for services beyond the ordinary salary or settled wages, has no place in our legislation but seems to be repudiated by the most necessary implication. Once to admit it is to open a wide door for imposition and corruption. Dr. Webster tells us that the common acceptation of the word in America is a fee to an officer for a specific service in lieu of an annual salary, but he gives also the other sense in which it is elsewhere used. The salaries fixed in our Code for some officers, the specified fees for services allowed to others and the penalties imposed in some instances for demanding fees for services not performed or for demanding greater fees for services than those allowed by law, all show the intention of the legislature that the compensation to the officer should be restricted to the fees expressly provided. In the inspection laws throughout, the fees are specifically named, and the idea of any further compensation would seem to be plainly excluded. For many years indeed prior to 1792, after the sum named were added the words “and no more” which served, not merely to limit the pecuniary fee to be paid down, but to exclude the idea of any other compensation, and thus discountenance the custom of taking the draft flour; and although in that year these words were dropped, it was doubtless because they were deemed surplusage the idea having been sufficiently expressed, as the words “to be paid down by the owner” found in previous acts had been dropped in 1787. And when the present Code fixes *the inspector’s fee at one cent the barrel, it can hardly mean to give as much more in. the form of flour as the inspector may think it necessary to take for the purpose of inspection.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Va. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaplane-v-crenshaw-va-1860.