Hutchinson v. Whitmore

51 N.W. 451, 90 Mich. 255, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 625
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 51 N.W. 451 (Hutchinson v. Whitmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchinson v. Whitmore, 51 N.W. 451, 90 Mich. 255, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 625 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

Long, J.

The court directed verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant. Plaintiff brings error.

The objections upon the trial relate to the form and substance' of the declaration. The first count of the declaration is as follows:

Silas P. Hutchinson, plaintiff in this suit, complains of Ancil K. Whitmore [sheriff of said county for the year 1887], defendant in this suit, who has been duly-summoned to answer the plaintiff in a plea of trespass on the case, for that; whereas, to wit, on or about the 2d day of November, 1887, in the township of Woodstock, in said county, said .plaintiff was lawfully possessed as of his own property of the following goods and chattels, viz., 18 tons of tame hay, about 200 bushels of oats, about 400 bushels of corn in the crib, on the farm of said S. P. Hutchinson, the undivided \ of 300 bushels of corn in the crib on said farm, 6 tons of marsh hay in shed and stack on said farm, 1 red yearling steer, one-black and white heifer, two spring calves, about 75-bushels of oats in the mill of Sanders & Son in said Woodstock, the undivided of all the clover seed on the premises of George Bowen in said Woodstock, about 1,500 bundles of cornstalks, all of great value, — of the-value of $300 (three hundred dollars). And, being so. possessed thereof, the said plaintiff afterwards, to wit, on or about the day and year above named, and at the-place last aforesaid, casually lost the said described [258]*258goods and chattels and other property out of his possession, and the same afterwards, to wit, on the same year and day last aforesaid, and at the place aforesaid, came into the possession of the defendant, or his deputy or his agent, one James O. Morley, by finding; yet said defendant, well .knowing the said above-described property to be the property of the said plaintiff, and of right to appertain to and belong to him, the said defendant has not as yet delivered the said above-described property, or any part thereof, to the said plaintiff, although often requested so to do, and hath hitherto wholly refused so to do; and on or about the same year and day last aforesaid, and at the place aforesaid, the said defendant did by his deputy or agent, the said James O. Morley, convert and dispose of the said above-described goods and chattels and other property to his own use, to the damage of the plaintiff of $300 (three hundred dollars), [Which said goods and chattels said plaintiff then and there owned, needed, and used in his business, which was that of farming, which said farming business was his principal business during the year 1887, and for several years previous thereto.] And the said conversion and sale of said goods and chattels was contrary to the provisions of sections 25, 27, 28, 29, 30, and 31, chapter 266, of Howell’s Annotated Statutes of the State of Michigan, [relative to judgment and the levy of executions,] whereby the said goods and chattels were eventually lost to the said plaintiff, and by means thereof, of the loss of the use of the same in his business thereof, he was greatly and further injured and damnified to his •damage $300 (three hundred dollars).”

The second count of the declaration refers to the first ■count for a description of the property, and alleges the plaintiff’s possession of it, and that it was seized and taken out of his possession by the deputy or agent of the defendant, who pretended' to seize and take it by virtue of an execution issued .out of the circuit court for the county of Lenawee, covering the goods and chattels •of the plaintiff and Charles E. Gunn and Oliver P. B. G-unn, October 8, 1887, said execution being in favor of Frank Boss. This count further charges that it was the [259]*259duty of the'defendant or his deputy to make an inventory of the property seized, and to have the same appraised, and to permit or allow the plaintiff to select for himself such of the property as was exempt by law from sale on execution; that the defendant wholly failed and refused to allow such selection to be made, though the goods and chattels seized were of the nature which by the law were exempt from sale on execution.

Upon filing this declaration the defendant pleaded the general issue, and gave notice, among other things, that the defendant, during the year 1887, was sheriff of Lenawee county. The notice than recites the judgment in favor of Frank Boss, and against the plaintiff and Charles E. Gunn and Oliver P. B. Gunn, and the issuing of the execution thereon, and the placing of such execution in the hands of his deputy, James C. Morley, for service; and that/ if any of the acts complained of in the declaration were done, it was by virtue of said execution in seizing and levying upon the goods described in plaintiff’s declaration.

The cause came on for trial in the Lenawee circuit court before a jury, and the counsel for plaintiff made his opening statement to the jury, in which he claimed and stated that the case before them was one of trover, in which plaintiff claimed certain property as the owner thereof, which was seized and taken from him by Mr. Morley while acting as a deputy-sheriff under Ancil K. Whitmore, who was then sheriff of Lenawee county, and he, Morley, claimed to have acted under a writ of execution issued out of the circuit court for the county of Lenawee upon a judgment entered in said county against plaintiff and in favor of Frank Boss; that the principal business of the plaintiff at the time was that of farming, and that this property, under the law, was exempt from seizure on execution against the owner; and that said [260]*260Morley did not permit the plaintiff to select his exemptions, or set them out to plaintiff. No other claim was made except such as arose from such seizure.

The plaintiff was then called as a witness in his own behalf, and testified that during the years 1885, 1886, and 1887 his principal business was that of a farmer. He was then asked what property he had upon his farm in the year 1887. This was objected to for the reason that the declaration did not allege that the defendant was sheriff of Lenawee county at that time. This objection was sustained, and the court permitted the plaintiff to amend his declaration; and the first count of the declaration was amended by the insertion of the words inclosed in brackets. Upon his amendment being made, the court permitted the plaintiff to testify that he had upon the farm at that time the property seized and taken from him under the execution. The plaintiff also testified that Mr. Morley was a deputy-sheriff of Lenawee county at that time. Plaintiff^ counsel thereupon offered to show by the witness that the property mentioned in the declaration was taken by virtue of an execution by Mr. Morley; that he was deputy-sheriff, acting under the defendant as sheriff of Lenawee county; and that the plaintiff demanded the property as exempt, within the term “stock,” as used in the eighth subdvision of section 27, chap. 266, How. Stat., — that is, stock on the farm,— and that it was exempt to the plaintiff for that reason. The court refused to permit this testimony, for the reason, as stated, that the declaration did not make a case for the recovery of exempt property seized upon execution. Exception was taken to this ruling. The plaintiff thereupon rested his case, and, the defendant offering no testimony, the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant.

The only question for consideration is whether the [261]*261declaration states a cause of action for recovery of property which is exempt by statute from sale under execution. Section 27 (How. Stat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.W. 451, 90 Mich. 255, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-whitmore-mich-1892.