Gerrish v. Edson

1 N.H. 82
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 15, 1817
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 N.H. 82 (Gerrish v. Edson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Gerrish v. Edson, 1 N.H. 82 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1817).

Opinion

Woodbury, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question as to the rule of damages in this class of actions is one of some difficulty.

[83]*83The verdict of the jury had settled the fact, that the defendant knowingly violated his duty in taking insufficient hail. For the injury resulting from that wrong the plaintiff has instituted the present action on the case ; in which, most unquestionably, he is entitled to recover all the damage produced by the defendant's misconduct. The amount of that damage is the only dispute; and though this was, as questions of this kind always must be, determined by a jury, yet the court possessed and exercised the authority to give them directions on the relevancy and competency of the testimony, to diminish or increase the damage. But the defendant contends that these directions should have been, that the poverty of the original debtor rendered the damage merely nominal, as the plaintiff has lost only the value of his claim against said debtor. We apprehend, however, that a consideration of all the circumstances in this case — the form of the action —the character of the defendant’s conduct — the nature and time of the injury to the plaintiff — will demonstrate that the rule of damage adopted at the trial is more appropriate. When a precept is delivered to the sheriff, with directions to hold the defendant to bail, the abject of the plaintiff is not only to compel an appearance of the defendant, but to obtain security or payment. Should the debtor then be embarrassed or insolvent, that circumstance ought to increase rather than lessen the officer’s vigilance and fidelity in pursuing the directions. For in proportion to the defendant’s wealth, it becomes immaterial to the plaintiff what may be the property of his bail; as in that ratio is the necessity of a resort to the latter improbable. On any construction, however, of the sheriff’s conduct, he was guilty of a known and deliberate dereliction of duty. But had he performed that duty • had the bail been sufficient, the plaintiff’s execution against the bail must have been satisfied ; and the plaintiff has therefore lost the nominal amount of that execution, after deducting what he may probably be able to collect on it, and on his judgment against the principal. The person whose wrong has prevented the eventual satisfaction which would other[84]*84wise have been obtained, comes into court with an ill grace, claiming to be exempted from so remote a consequence of his misconduct, and to be liable only for the probable worth of the original demand. It is a general doctrine, that the perpetrator of offences is liable for all the consequences produced by them, ho we ver much those consequences may exceed what he might have anticipated. 1 Hale P. C. 615. — 2 Hawk. 316. — 4 Bl. C. 37. — Foster C. L. 370_\f ..Sally Ev. 446. The man that negligently and wrongfully throws a torch among combustibles, would make an ill defence, when prosecuted for burning them and the contiguous buildings, by contending that the fire might possibly not have communicated to the latter, or peradventure have been extinguished before producing so extensive a loss. 2 D. fy E. 589. — Both. Ob. PL l, eh. 1, Art. 2, § 167.

It has been argued, that an analogy exists between the present action and one for escape; and that in the latter the poverty of the original defendant is considered to ’ mitigate the damage. But this supposed analogy does not exist. The permission of an escape is a violation of the sheriff’s duty to detain in custody the debtor’s body : and the measure of the plaintiff’s damage is sometimes held to be the difference between having and not having that body. Where the debtor is poor, this difference has been regarded as an injury merely nominal. The taking of insufficient instead of: sufficient bail, however, is the breach of an obligation totally distinct of an obligation to obtain from the debtor the security of another that the debtor shall abide the judgment of the court in that suit — or that the amount recovered shall be paid by the person who gives the security. The measure of the plaintiff’s damage in this case, therefore, when the judgment is not abided by, would seem to be the difference between having the amount recovered not paid and paid ; or, between having a bad security for it and a good one. If the security possessed, however, be of any value, we direct its worth to be deducted, in order that the sheriff may pay nothing but the real loss sustained from his misconduct. For these rea[85]*85sons the authorities in relation to escapes do not contradict the rule adopted in the present case; Indeed* on examination it will be discovered that most of these authorities are prosecutions for negligent and not voluntary escapes.Our statute regulating prisons

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Related

Hills v. Hoitt
18 N.H. 386 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1846)
Gordon v. Edson
2 N.H. 152 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1819)

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.H. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerrish-v-edson-nhsuperct-1817.