Farley v. Lincoln

51 N.H. 577
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 N.H. 577 (Farley v. Lincoln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farley v. Lincoln, 51 N.H. 577 (N.H. 1872).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

Supposing the facts to be as claimed by the plaintiffs, we think they might maintain trespass or replevin against Sanborn for the goods, notwithstanding he came to the possession of them in the first place by means of a fraudulent sale. And this stands well enough, [579]*579upon the ground that there never was any real contract of sale between the parties by which the plaintiffs were bound. Sanborn acquired no rights in the'property by the form of a sale which was gone through with, and hence his first as well as every subsequent act of dominion over it amounted to a trespass, if the defendant elected so to treat it.

No serious question is made by the defendant’s counsel but this would be so ; and it is admitted further, that, upon a demand and refusal, the plaintiffs might maintain trover or detinue for the goods against this defendant. But it is insisted that, inasmuch as it does not appear that the defendant was a party to Sanborn’s fraud, or had knowledge of it, his taking by assignment from Sanborn cannot be regarded as wrongful, although Sanborn had no title, and therefore that the present action will not lie against him. This is the important question in the case, and if it were to be decided upon authority alone, it would undoubtedly present considerable difficulties. See Barrett v. Warren, 3 Hill 350, and Stanley v. Gaylord, 1 Cush. 536. In these two cases the authorities on both sides of the question are collected, and the whole subject very ably discussed. The New York court came out one way, holding that trespass would not lie against a person who comes to the possession of goods by delivery, and without fault on his part, e. g., an innocent bailee of the wrong-doer, Cowen, J., dissenting; while the Massachusetts court held exactly the contrary, Wilde, J., dissenting.

To maintain trespass or replevin, there must be a wrongful taking; and the question is, whether the taking by the defendant here was wrongful, in a legal sense, as against the plaintiffs. At the time of the assignment the plaintiffs were the absolute general owners, and were entitled to the immediate possession of the goods. The assignment passed no title, and conferred no right upon the defendant in respect of the goods as against the plaintiffs, for the obvious reason that Sanborn had no right or title in them as against the plaintiffs which he could confer upon anybody. This being so, the first act of possession exercised by the defendant over them was inconsistent with and in derogation of the plaintiffs’ right. Absolute ownership draws possession after it. If, then, the defendant’s act in taking the possession was an interference with the plaintiffs’ right of actual possession growing out of their ownership, it was in legal effect a disturbance of their constructive possession.

The defendant’s act in assuming dominion over the property was! none the less an invasion of the plaintiffs’ right, and none the less a trespass, because he did not intend a wrong, or know that he j was committing one. An encroachment upon a legal right must constitute a legal wrong; and it is familiar law, that intention is of no account in a civil action brought by one' man to recover damage for a wrongful interference with his property by another. The law gives the plaintiff compensation for the injury he has sustained, whether the defendant intended such injury or not. Indeed, a large proportion of trespasses, especially to land, are doubtless committed through inadver[580]*580tence or mistake, without wrongful intent, and without knowledge on the part of the wrong-doer that he has overstepped his right. ‘

How does this case differ in principle from that of a person who, under a mistake as to the location of the boundaries of his land, encloses a piece of adjoining land of which the real owner has never had actual possession, and cultivates it in the mistaken belief that it is his own ? One act is undoubtedly as free from the taint of moral wrong as the other. In both alike there is only a disturbance of a possession purely constructive. The only distinction is, that in one case the subject is land, while in the other it is a chattel; and I do not see that this makes any more difference than if the property interfered with were in one case a cow, while in the other it was a horse.

In Stanley v. Gaylord, before cited, the case of Hyde v. Noble, 13 N. H. 494, is quoted as an authority fully sustaining the doctrine there laid down. Hyde v. Noble was trover by the owner of a cargo of lumber against Noble and another, who had bought and taken the delivery of a portion of it from the plaintiff’s bailee while transporting it under a contract from Hallowell and Gardiner in Maine to Weymouth in Massachusetts. In delivering the opinion of the court, Parker, C. J., says,— “ The purchase by the defendants, taking possession as they appear to have done, and holding it as their own property, was a conversion. They received the possession from one who had no authority to deliver it to them, under a sale which purported to vest the property in them ; and they, by the purchase, undertook to control it as their own property. This was an assumption of power over it, inconsistent with the rights of the plaintiff. Purchasing, the property from one who had no right to sell, and holding it to their own use, is a direct act of conversion, without any demand and refusal: their possession was unlawful in its inception, 'by reason of the want of authority in Kenniston to make the transfer. It is only where a party obtains the possession lawfully, that it is necessary to show a demand and refusal.” The same thing in substance has been said in several other cases in this State. Doty v. Hawkins, 6 N. H. 247; Lovejoy v. Jones, 30 N. H., at p. 169; Cooper v. Newman, 45 N. H. 339, and authorities cited.

The facts stated in Hyde v. Noble show that there was a demand and refusal before the commencement of the '.suit; but that case lias been constantly referred to, as well in this State as in other jurisdictions, to the point broadly laid down in the opinion of Chief Justice Parker, that trover without a demand lies in favor of the owner of a chattel against one who has come to the possession of it by purchase from one having no right to sell; and it would doubtless be a surprise to the profession to learn that such is not the law here. We think it is the law, and that it rests upon reasons quite satisfactory and sound. Parsons v. Webb, 8 Greenl. 38; Galvin v. Bacon, 2 Fairf. 30; Stanley v. Gaylord, 1 Cush. 536;—and see the able and instructive dissenting opinion of Cowen, J., in Barrett v. Warren, 3 Hill, at p. 351. But it is very obvious that there was no conversion in the case of Hyde v. Noble, unless the original taking was a conversion; and that taking [581]*581was not a conversion unless it was wrongful. If, therefore, it was not wrongful, a demand and refusal would have been necessary before trover could be maintained. But “whenever the taking of goods is wrongful, trespass, replevin, and trover without a demand are concurrent remedies for the owner, if he has the right of immediate possession.” Metcalf, J., in Stanley v. Gaylord, at p. 545, citing Wilkinson on Replevin 2; 7 Johns. 143; 1 Chit. Pl. 176; 2 Saund. 47 k, note. That being so, the doctrine of Hyde v. Noble

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.H. 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farley-v-lincoln-nh-1872.