Ilsley v. Nichols

29 Mass. 270
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 Mass. 270 (Ilsley v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ilsley v. Nichols, 29 Mass. 270 (Mass. 1832).

Opinion

Shaw C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. No ques-1 . \ ^on's made of the plaintiff’s right to recover ; but the question turns upon the amount of damages. The defendants, being a deputy sheriff with his assistants, having a writ against the plaintiff, forced the doors of his dwellinghouse and attached his goods. The jury by their verdict distinguish between the damages for breaking and entering the house, and those given for the value of the goods. The defendants contend that though the breaking and entering the plaintiff’s dwellinghouse' was unlawful, yet that the attachment of the goods made by means thereof was valid and lawful, and therefore that the value of the goods ought to be deducted from the damages given by the verdict.

It is remarkable that upon a question of such frequent recurrence in practice, and of so much importance in relation to the service of civil process and the powers and duties of officers therein, no direct judicial authority is to be found. The circumstances to be taken into consideration are, that the goods were in a dwellinghouse, and were attached in consequence of the house being broken open by forcing the outer door, that the direct and avowed purpose of breaking open the house, was to make an attachment, and that this was done against the will and contrary to the express prohibition of the owner. It is clear, from all the authorities, and wholly undisputed as a rule of law, that the act of thus breaking the outer door of a dwellinghouse, is unlawful. The goods were attached in pursuance of a previous design, and through the medium of this unlawful act, and could not have been otherwise attached ; and the question is, whether the attachment was valid, and constituted a legal lien on the goods. Were it not for some very respectable authorities having a different aspect, it would seem from the mere statement of the question, that it must be decided in the negative.

[277]*277In Bacon’s Abridgment and by other respectable compilers, it is stated, that on a capias, or fieri facias, the sheriff is not authorized to break the door of a dwellinghouse, though the execution would be good. Bac. Abr. Sheriff, N. 3. The authorities on the subject are stated with great clearness and fulness, in a note by Mr. Metcalf, the American editor of Yélverton’s Reports, p. 29.

On a reference to the case in the Year Books, 18 E. 4. /. 4. which is usually cited as the foundation of the supposed rule, we think it is quite manifest, that the real point decided there was, that a sheriff is not justified in breaking a dwelling-house in order to execute a fieri facias, for a fieri facias will not excuse an officer for breaking a dwellinghouse.

Lord Coke, in his report of Semayne’s case, 5 Rep. 93, refers to the same case in the Year Books, and says it was resolved by Littleton and all his companions, “ that the sheriff cannot break the defendant’s house by force of a fieri facias, but he is a trespasser by the breaking, and yet the execution which he then doth in the house is good.” It is obvious from the facts that this point was not raised or decided in Semayne’s case, and it is not mentioned by the other reporters of the same case.

In Lee v. Gansel, Cowp. 1, though the above cases are cited by Lord Mansfield, as they stand, yet he used them for another and distinct purpose, and he expressed no opinion, nor had he in the case' before him occasion to express any, upon the point now under consideration.

„ In Heminway v. Saxton and others, 3 Mass. R. 222, the action was trespass quare clausum against a deputy sheriff and his assistants, alleging that they broke and entered the plaintiff’s dwellinghouse, and took and carried away sundry articles of property, with other wrongs. The defendants justified, under a writ against'the plaintiff and an attachment of the goods made thereon ; but the plaintiff had judgment. No question was made of the validity of the attachment, and it does not appear whether the value of the goods was included in ihe damages ; and it is not therefore a direct authority for any thing more, than that it is unlawful to break a dwellinghouse, in order to make an attachment upon a writ, and that an action of trespass [278]*278will lie for it, by the owner, whose goods are thus attached, against the officer. But as it is a general rule in trespass, that the plaintiff shall be indemnified for all losses sustained in consequence of the tortious act of the defendant, and as the value of the goods is commonly the most considerable, and often the only item of loss in such cases, it may be presumed, that if a different rule had been adopted in this case, some notice would have been taken of it. If the damages were given according to the usual rule, the case is an authority against the validity of such an attachment.

In Widgery v. Haskell, 5 Mass. R. 155, Parsons C. J. referred to the common position found in the compilers, as it would naturally present itself to his recollection at the moment, as an apt illustration of the argument which he was enforcing. The proposition he was illustrating was this; that the protection of a debtor’s effects from attachment. in his house is not the design of the law, but only an incidental protection, resulting from the provision, that a man’s house is his castle. He then adds, “ and if his effects are found without his castle, they may be attached ; and even in his castle an attachment would be good, although the party might, be punished as a trespasser for invading the castle.” This dictum would be entitled to great weight, had it been the result of examination and reflection ; but we think it very manifest that it was not. The case turned upon the validity of a trust assignment by an insolvent debtor, to an assignee of his own choice, without the act or consent of any of his creditors ; and one argument in support of it was, that in effect a debtor might do the same thing, that is, dispose of his property at his own will without the assent of his creditors, by collecting his effects within his dwellinghouse and paying whom he pleased. It was this argument, which the Chief Justice was answering ; which he did very powerfully, by showing, that although a debtor might do this, it was not because the law deemed it a purpose just and lawful in itself, and one which might be accomplished in other modes, but was necessarily incidental to another and higher principle of the law, designed to afford security to a man and his family, by the protection of his dwellinghouse. It was therefore concluded, that this protection could not be extended :o a conveyance in [279]*279trust, of goods not within the debtor’s dwellinghouse. That part of the proposition which we are now examining, that the attachment of the property would be good, though the entry of the house was wrongful, was obviously not a point in the case ; and as it is everywhere conceded, that the protection of the dwelling, and not an immunity of goods from attachment on civil process, is the object of the legal maxim, we think it equally clear that this position was not necessary to support the argument which the Chief Justice was maintaining.

From a review of the cases it seems never to have been judicially determined, that an attachment on mesne process or fieri facias, where the possession is obtained by unlawful means, would be valid and effectual to give the sheriff and the creditor a legal right to hold the property.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Mass. 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ilsley-v-nichols-mass-1832.