Edgecomb v. Lawlis

140 A. 182, 126 Me. 550, 1928 Me. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 31, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 A. 182 (Edgecomb v. Lawlis) 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
Edgecomb v. Lawlis, 140 A. 182, 126 Me. 550, 1928 Me. LEXIS 14 (Me. 1928).

Opinion

Wilson, C. J.

An action of trespass quare clausum against the defendant who at the time of the alleged trespass was sheriff of Aroostook County, for acts committed by one of his deputies. The plaintiff was the owner of a potato house built for the winter storage of potatoes. In the fall of 1923, one Richardson became a tenant at will of the premises, holding them in common with the plaintiff who retained the right to store therein certain farm machinery. Richardson harvested his potatoes in the fall, on which tfie International Agricultural corporation, Buffalo Fertilizer Works, which will hereinafter be referred to as the Fertilizer Co., had a crop mortgage, and stored them in the potato house of the plaintiff under the above arrangements as to tenancy.

In the early winter, Richardson began hauling the potatoes, but not having paid his rent, the plaintiff notified him not to move any more until the rent was paid, and on January 24, 1924, the plaintiff put a lock on the door and excluded Richardson, from the potato house.

Richardson then called up the agent for the Fertilizer Co., who consulted the attorney for the company. The attorney thereupon sued out a replevin writ in which the Fertilizer Co. was named as plaintiff, and the plaintiff in this action as defendant.

A bond in which the Fertilizer Co. was named as principal and executed in the name of the principal by Frank L. Rhoda, the Fertilizer Company’s representative in that community, who described himself as agent, was delivered to the officer who served the writ. The sureties though named in the body of the bond as Mark T. Phair and Henry Phair, signed as Phair Co., M. T. Phair Treas., Henry Phair, Pres. An ordinary wafer was attached as a seal to the signatures of the principal and of the sureties.

The officer was then instructed by the agent for the Fertilizer Co. that he was to take the potatoes and deliver them to Richardson for the Fertilizer Co.

Armed with this precept, the officer went to the house of Mr. Edge-comb and asked for the key to the lock on the potato house. On being [552]*552refused, the officer sent for Richardson, went to the potato house and pulled or broke the staple holding the lock on the door and entered. As it was very cold, he then suggested to Richardson that he build a fire to keep the potatoes from freezing.

Up to this point, the parties are in substantial accord as to the facts.

The defendant through his deputy is charged in the case at bar with breaking and entering the potato house and destroying its contents, it having burned on the night of January 30, 1924. The defendant pleaded the general issue and in a brief statement justified -the entry of his deputy by his precept described above.

Under sec. 10, Chapter 101 R. S., the officer before serving a replevin writ shall take from the plaintiff a bond with sufficient sureties. If he serve' such a writ without a sufficient bond, he is a trespasser. Gorlin v. Strickland, 27 Me., 443, 449; Williams v. Dunn, 120 Me. 506.

When the question is raised in the replevin suit as between the two claimants, the officer is presumed to have acted regularly. If' the defendant seeks to dismiss the replevin action because the officer did not take a good bond or with sufficient sureties, he must do it by plea in abatement and furnish proof, otherwise the officer is presumed to have complied with the statute if the bond appears regular on its face. Massachusetts Breweries Co. v. Herman, 106 Me., 524. This is also true when the action is on the bond between the principal or sureties and the obligee. Howe v. Handley, 28 Me., 251.

But where the action is against the officer as a trespasser and he justified by virtue of his precept, the burden is on him to show that he had taken a valid bond, otherwise he may be liable. Williams v. Dunn, supra.

The first issue raised at the trial was whether the officer had. taken a sufficient bond. The presiding Justice instructed the jury that the bond was not sufficient, and they should find at least nominal damages.

The signing by the sureties, while somewhat irregular in form, must be held to be by them individually; that the words, “Pres.” and “Treas.” after their names are merely descriptio personae. Sturdivant v. Hull, 59 Me., 172; Me. Red Granite Co. v. York, 89 Me., 54; Edwards v. Pinkham, 113 Me., 4. No question is raised here or was raised below as to the adequacy of the sureties.

[553]*553It was also urged that there is no authority shown for the giving of the replevin bond in the name of the corporation. The plaintiff introduced the replevin writ from the files of the Court and offered to introduce a plea in abatement filed in the replevin suit and the record of the Court showing the disposition of the case. Only the replevin writ was admitted, however, which discloses that the officer had returned that he had taken the potatoes and delivered them to the plaintiff named in the writ.

It is unnecessary upon this evidence to rely on a presumption that the officer had proceeded regularly or that the agent’s authority to sign the bond is to be presumed, no evidence appearing to the contrary. We think the defendant or the plaintiff for him presented sufficient evidence upon which the jury would have been warranted in finding that the execution of the bond was duly authorized and was sufficient. Proprietors v. Wentworth, 36 Me., 339.

No.t only did it appear that the same man who authorized the bringing of the action signed the plaintiff’s name to the bond, and was apparently the duly accredited agent of the plaintiff in that community for the transaction of its business, but the plaintiff by its attorney entered the replevin writ in Court. On what ground it was abated, if it was, we do not know, but the entry of the writ in Court by plaintiff’s attorney, who is presumed to have authority for the purpose, Flint v. Comly, 95 Me., 255; Boom Corp. v. Lamson, 16 Me., 224; York Harbor Village Corp. v. Libby et al, 126 Me., 537, was sufficient together with the other testimony as to the agent’s apparent general authority to warrant a finding by the jury that the act of the agent in signing the bond was duly authorized. This is not a case where it is admitted that the agent had no authority, Proprietors v. Went-worth, supra. The agent here may have had authority in the first instance. It is not a question of ratification. The proof offered by the plaintiff himself is not only consistent with full authority in the agent to sign the replevin bond, but is sufficient to base such a finding by the jury thereon. If so, the instruction of the Court that, as a matter of law, the bond was not a good bond, was error.

It is true that the defendant even then might not have been aggrieved by this ruling if the officer afterward exceeded his authority and became a trespasser ab initio. We think, however, that the evi[554]*554donee is so clear as to the officer’s acts and their legal effect that it does not warrant such a conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A. 182, 126 Me. 550, 1928 Me. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgecomb-v-lawlis-me-1928.