Hoffman v. Carow

22 Wend. 285
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 22 Wend. 285 (Hoffman v. Carow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. Carow, 22 Wend. 285 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1839).

Opinion

After advisement, the following opinions were delivered :

By the Chancellor.

The simple question presented for our decision in this case is, whether the purchaser of stolen goods, who afterwards sells them as his own to a bona fide purchaser, is liable to the owner of the goods, in an action of trover for such conversion thereof to his own use ? One of the members of this court, . upon the argument, supposed the bare statement of such a case was sufficient to enable the court to decide it without further argument: and I thought so too, until one of the learned and very able counsel for the plaintiffs in error assured us he was sincere it believing the action could not be sustained, and referred to a case from the English Term Reports, which was apparently a decision in favor of his clients. To understand that case, therefore, and to distinguish it from the present, I have found it necessary to bestow a little more time upon the examination of this subject than I should have otherwise deemed it my duty to give to it.

It is known to the professional members of the coutrt, that in the market towns of England there are periodical fairs, where property is bought and sold, called market days; and that by the custom of the city of London, every day except Sunday, is a market day, and every trademan’s shop is a market overt for those things in which he usually deals at that place ; and that by the common law, a sale in a market overt actually changes the title to the property in favor of a bona-fide purchaser thereof, even though it has been stolen from the rightful owner. 5 Coke’s R. 83, a. The only remedy of the owner of stolen property to recover it again, under such circumstances, at the common law, was to pursue his appeal against the felon to conviction, and [291]*291then he was entitled to restitution of his goods, although they had been sold in a market overt. Coke’s 2d Inst. 714. So, also, if goods were stolen, and the thief abandoned or waived them in his flight, they were forfeited to the" crown, or the lord of the manor, unless the owner proceeded upon his appeal to attaint the thief. Foxley’s case, 5 Coke, 109, a. But as this proceeding to convict the felon by a private suit was very inconvenient and expensive to the owner of stolen property, the statute 21 Hen. VIII. ch. 11, was enacted, by which the stolen goods were directed to be restored to the owner upon his procuring a conviction of the thief, upon an indictment in the ordinary way, without the necessity of an appeal. Staunf. P. C. ed. of 1583, p. 167. Under this statute, it is the settled law in England, that upon the conviction of the offender, the owner is entitled to be restored to hisjproperty, notwithstandiug it may have been sold to a bona fide purchaser in a market overt. Burgess v. Koney, Trem. P. C. 315. Coke’s 2d Inst. 714. J. Kelyng’s R. 48.

In the case of Horwood v. Smith, 2 T. R. 750, relied on by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error to show that they could not be liable for a conversion of these goods which took place before the conviction of the thief in May, 1833, there had been an actual sale of the stolen property to Smith, the defendant, in a market overt. The title of the owner was therefore absolutely divested by this sale, so that Smith, the defendant, could not be guilty of a conversion as to him, by afterwards selling the sheep to another person, before the plaintiff’s right to the property had been restored by a conviction of the felon. By a reference to the opinion of Mr. Justice Buller in that case, it will be seen that he puts the decision upon that ground ; and the language put by the reporter into the mouth of Lord Kenton, that the title to the stolen property was in dubio previous to the sale to the defendant in the market overt, I shall presently show is not considered as law, even in England. The case under consideration, therefore, differs from Horwood v. Smith, in this ; that there had been a sale in market overt in that case previous to the alleged conversion, and [292]*292the title which Smith acquired by that sale was not divested by the subsequent conviction until long afterwards, which conviction was considered as giving the original owner a new title to the property; whereas, in the present case, there never had been any sales in a market overt, to convey any title to the defendants which required to be divested by a conviction. Whether there are any markets overt in Maryland, where the defendants purchased this property from the thief, I do not know; but if there are, there was no attempt to prove on the trial that they purchased the property in a market overt; and the learned Judge Blackstone, the English Justinian,” says, in so many words, that if my goods are stolen from me and sold out of market overt, my property is not altered, and I may take them wherever I find them.” 2 Black. Comm. 449. See also Foxley’s case, 5 Coke’s R. 109, a; and Kelham’s Laws of Wm. the Conqueror, 73, Law 44.

The case of Parker v. Patrick, 5 Term. Rep. 175, depends upon an entirely different principle. The goods in that case were obtained by fraud and not by felony. The sale to the fraudulent vendee was, therefore, not void, but only voidable at the election of the vendor; and as the vendee had pawned them to an innocent person for a valuable consideration, the pawnee was permitted to hold them as against the owner who had enabled the vendee to obtain property of the defendant, upon the security of property which had apparently been sold to the pawnor, so as to give him the legal title thereto. Morey v. Walsh, in our supreme court, 8 Cowen Rep. 238, was, decided in favor of the bona fide purchaser from a fraudulent vendee, upon the same principle ; although it will be seen the chief justice said in that case, that in this state where we had no market overt, a sale of stolen goods would not divest the title of the owner. The same distinction between the cases of goods obtained by fraud and goods obtained by felony, is noticed by Lord Denman in Peer v. Humphrey, 1 Harr. & Woll. Rep. 28, which is also a direct authority in favor of sustaining the judgment of the supreme court in the present case. Indeed it is a case upon all fours with this, and makes the distinction, which I have been endea[293]*293voring to explain, between Harwood v. Smith, and the case which we are now to decide. The servant of the plaintiff stole three oxen and a heifer from him and sold the three oxen to the defendant for cash, but the sale was not in a market overt; the thief was afterwards taken and convicted, but before the conviction the defendant had, sold the cattle to other persons. After the conviction of the thief the plaintiff brought his action of trover against the defendant, for the previous conversion, as in this case, and recovered the value of the cattle. Upon the case being brought before the court of king’s bench, the counsel for the defendant cited Horwood v. Smith, and referred to what Lord Kenyon said as to the property being in dubio between the felony and the conviction. To which Lord C. J.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Wend. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-carow-nycterr-1839.