Jacobson v. Aberdeen Packing Co.

66 P. 419, 26 Wash. 175, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 626
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1901
DocketNo. 3784
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 66 P. 419 (Jacobson v. Aberdeen Packing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobson v. Aberdeen Packing Co., 66 P. 419, 26 Wash. 175, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 626 (Wash. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hadley, J.

This action was brought by respondent to recover possession of certain personal property, consisting of pound net material, of which respondent claimed to be the owner. It is alleged that appellants wrongfully and forcibly and without respondent’s consent took possession of said property. Judgment is demanded for the recovery of the possession of the property, or for the sum of $175, the value thereof, in case its return cannot be-had, and also for $150 damages. The appellants in their answer admit that respondent was the owner of the property, but deny that they wrongfully took possession thereof. They also allege affirmatively that the appellant Martin Flink was constable of Ilwaco precinct, Pacific county, Washington, duly elected and qualified as such, and that the appellant Aberdeen Packing Company was a corporation; that on the 4th day of June, 1897, the respondent executed and delivered his promissory note to said corporation for the sum of $140, due on demand; that on the 13th day of September, 1897, respondent executed and delivered to said corporation his certain other promissory note for the sum of $225, due one day after date; that for the purpose of securing said notes, the respondent also executed two chattel mortgages to said corporation, there being one mortgage of even date with each note, and given specially [177]*177to secure such note; that, default having been made in the payment of said notes, the appellant Martin Flink, as constable, levied upon and took into his possession certain personal property described in the answer, which levy was made by virtue of said notes and chattel mortgages, and by direction of the attorney of the mortgagee; that appellants believe the goods and chattels so levied upon to be the same as those described in the complaint; and' that said levy and taking constitute the supposed wrongful taking in the complaint alleged. It is next alleged that in making such levy and in taking possession of said goods and chattels appellants acted according to law, and in all things complied with the statutes; that the appellant Martin Flink, as constable, proceeded to foreclose said chattel mortgages by notice and sale, and applied the proceeds of such .sale upon the indebtedness of respondent evidenced by said promissory notes. Full copies of the notice, manner of service, and posting thereof are set forth in the constable’s return, which also contains a full statement of his doings, and is made a part of the answer. It is also alleged that, after applying' the proceeds of such sale upon the amount of indebtedness represented by said notes, there remained due thereon the sum of $132.01; and it is demanded that respondent’s action shall be dismissed, and that the appellant, the Aberdeen Packing Company shall have judgment against respondent for said sum of $132.01. A second and third affirmative defense were, upon agreement of counsel, stricken by the court. The reply denies the allegations of the answer that the property described in the chattel mortgages is the same as that described in the complaint. ’ On stipulation of the parties, testimony was taken before a justice of the peace, and thereafter transcribed, to be read before the court at [178]*178the trial. The cause was tried before the court without a jury, the jury being waived, and the court rendered judgment that respondent is entitled to recover judgment against appellants for the return of the property which had been wrongfully and forcibly taken, or the value thereof, amounting to $175, with interest from said taking, in case the return of the property cannot be had; that said property had been disposed of by appellants, and could not be returned, and that respondent should therefore have judgment for said sum of $175 and interest. Prom said judgment this appeal was taken.

The findings of the trial court are very brief, and it is insisted by appellants that the court erred in not making such findings upon other points claimed to be within the issues as were proposed by appellants. The findings, in effect, were that appellant the Aberdeen Packing Company is a corporation, and appellant Plink is a qualified constable, as above stated; that at the time the property was taken, respondent was the owner thereof, and entitled to its possession; that its value is the aggregate sum of $175; that appellants, without respondent’s consent, wrongfully and forcibly took the property from respondent’s possession, and the same is unlawfully withheld by appellants; that appellants have disposed of the property, and its return cannot be had. The court did not find whether the chattels covered by the mortgages are the same as those claimed in the complaint, and there is no finding concerning the alleged foreclosure of the mortgages. We are therefore not advised from the record as to the precise theory upon which the case was determined. It may have been upon the theory that the chattels described in the complaint are> not the same as those included in the mortgages, or upon the theory that, even though they were the same, the manner of the attempted [179]*179foreclosure was unauthorized, and the taking therefore wrongful. It was conceded at the trial that respondent was indebted to the Aberdeen Packing Company upon the said promissory notes in the amount claimed, and it is vigorously urged that the court erred in not making findings upon the points above indicated. It becomes our duty, however, to determine the case upon the record that is here, and to ascertain if the final result reached by the trial court was correct. The evidence is very confusing as to whether the property described in the complaint is the same as that covered by the mortgages. Appellants claim it should be found that the chattels which respondent seeks to recover are identical with those described in the mortgages. However, even if it should be so found, the mortgagee’s right to seize, the chattels and subject them to its possession is limited to the steps of a regular foreclosure as authorized by law. The record shows that possession was taken by appellant Blink as constable, and that all the proceedings of the attempted foreclosure were conducted by him as such constable. This court held in Pickle v. Smalley, 21 Wash. 473 (58 Pac. 581), that, a constable has no authority to foreclose a chattel mortgage by notice and sale under the terms of Bal. Code, §§5871 and 5872, which provide .that such mortgages may be foreclosed by the service of the notice therein prescribed by the “sheriff or other proper officer,” and that “such notice shall be sufficient authority for the officer to take such property into his immediate possession.” The argument of the opinion upon this subject in that case concludes as follows:

“Other reasons might be assigned why constables are not proper officers to be entrusted with this power, but, without enumerating them, we conclude that the legislature meant to confine its execution to the sheriff (and [180]*180his deputies) when that officer is qualified to act, and to the officers provided by law to' act in the place of the sheriff when that officer is disqualified.”

Upon the authority of the above case it must therefore be held here that appellant Flink took possession of the chattels without authority, and that the taking was wrongful and unlawful. Since the taking was wrongful, and the property has since been disposed of, there was a conversion of the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P. 419, 26 Wash. 175, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobson-v-aberdeen-packing-co-wash-1901.