Epley v. Hunter

281 P. 327, 154 Wash. 163, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 993
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1929
DocketNo. 22050. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 281 P. 327 (Epley v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epley v. Hunter, 281 P. 327, 154 Wash. 163, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 993 (Wash. 1929).

Opinion

Tolman, J.

Appellant, as plaintiff, brought this action to recover upon four causes of action growing *165 out of the alleged wrongful or excessive levy of certain writs of attachment. There is no claim that the attachment writs were wrongfully issued, but all of the causes of action are based upon the things done or permitted to be done by the sheriff while acting under authority of the writs.

Trial was had to a jury, and, at the close of plaintiff’s case, a nonsuit was granted as to the defendants who were sureties on the attachment bonds.

After all of the evidence was introduced, the cause was submitted to the jury and a verdict returned against respondents Hunter, who were plaintiffs in the attachment suits, and against the sheriff, in the sum of $11,500. Thereafter, a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto was interposed and granted, and from that judgment, the plaintiff has appealed.

The errors assigned are based upon the granting of the nonsuit as to the sureties on the attachment bond, the entry of the judgment n. o. v., and the refusal to enter judgment on the verdict.

As to the first question, little need be said. The attachment bonds were in the statutory form, conditioned for the payment of all costs and damages, “should the same be wrongfully, oppressively, or maliciously sued out.” There is no allegation or proof of any wrongful suing out, and it needs no argument to demonstrate that the sureties on an attachment bond are not guarantors of the acts of the sheriff under the writ. The nonsuit as to the sureties was properly granted.

In the four causes of action, appellant seems to claim five items of injury growing out of the alleged wrongful acts of the sheriff: (1) Damages to personal property while in the custody of the sheriff; (2) damage to real property wrongfully seized; (3) destruction of his business; (é) destruction and loss of the *166 books of account and records; and (5) failure to redeliver property to the appellant or wrongful delivery thereof to third persons.

There are several items of proof, each having some bearing upon more than one item of injury, and we can best discuss the issues by setting out and considering what the jury may have found that the sheriff did, or permitted to be done.

It appears that appellant had, for some years, been carrying on an automobile, an automobile repair, and garage business in the city of Olympia in a building situated upon real estate of which he had possession by virtue of an executory contract to purchase on deferred payments. He had a considerable stock of automobile parts, accessories, supplies, gasoline, gasoline tanks, tools, fixtures, furniture, and, perhaps, both new and second hand automobiles. The value of the personal property is alleged to have been more than ten times the amount of the claims on which the attachment writs issued. The sheriff apparently levied' upon, and took into his possession, not only all of the personal property in appellant’s place of business, but' also seized and took into his possession the building which was a part of the real estate. No attempt appears to have been made to segregate and remove a reasonable amount of the property or segregate and retain within the building in charge of a custodian, or otherwise, any such reasonable amount of the property bearing some relation to the amount claimed to be due in the attachment suits, which aggregated less than $2,000. No attempt appears to have been made to comply with the statute, Rem. Comp. Stat., § 655, which directs a levy upon property as nearly as possible fifty per cent greater in value than the amount claimed to be due.

Not only this, but the sheriff, as shown by his re *167 turn, caused or permitted the business to be carried on while he was so in possession, and of the merchandise held under the levy sold for cash, he received and retained, according to his return, $242.68 in money, though the deputy in charge testified to a greater amount. There was also proof tending to show that the sheriff negligently caused or permitted the parts and accessories to become mixed and their marldngs destroyed, and a large portion thereof lost and damaged by the elements while in Ms possession, and that books and records belonging to the business were lost and destroyed. Still further, there was evidence to go to the jury tending to show that, wMle the sheriff was in possession of the building, line shafting and partitions were torn out and a remodeling of the building was begun. All of this tends to show an amazing-disregard on the part of the sheriff of Ms duties and of the rights of the appellant, so much so that if the other necessary elements appear, there was evidence amply sufficient to take the case to the jury.

As to damages to the personal property while in possession of the sheriff and failure to redeliver, which may be treated together, we find some general and not very satisfactory testimony as to the value of the personal property as a whole when seized by the sheriff, but no testimony of any character from which the jury could find what specific parts thereof were damaged, what specific parts thereof, if any, were not tendered or returned, or the lessened value of the whole wMch was occasioned by damage or failure to return. In other words, to prove damages in such a case as tMs, there must either be evidence of the value of the whole, when taken, and evidence of the value of what was returned, when returned, which, deducted from the first amount, would show the loss; or, there must be evidence of the loss or damage to specific *168 parts of the whole, together with evidence of the value of the parts lost and the extent of the lessened value of the parts damaged. "We find no testimony tending to establish any loss to appellant under either rule. Indeed, it appears that on the day appellant paid the judgments in the attachment suits, he gave a bill of sale covering apparently all, or substantially all, of this personal property to one Enbody, which recites a consideration of ten dollars and other good and valuable considerations. So far as we can find from the abstract, no testimony was given that appellant received less for the property by reason of what the sheriff had done or permitted. However wrongful the sheriff’s acts, there can be recovery under the rule in this state only for the monetary loss suffered, and there being no evidence of such a loss or the extent thereof, there was nothing to go to the jury on this issue.

All of what we have just said applies equally to the alleged destruction and loss of books of account and records. There was some general testimony from which the jury might have found that the sheriff, acting in entire disregard of appellant’s rights, seized or molested and interfered with appellant’s books and papers, but what, if any, were lost, or how appellant suffered any loss which can be measured in money from the sheriff’s acts in this respect, is left entirely to the imagination.

Destruction of appellant’s business. There is testimony showing that appellant had an established and profitable business which for some years had netted him an annual return of $10,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 P. 327, 154 Wash. 163, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epley-v-hunter-wash-1929.