Kelley v. Schuyler

44 L.R.A. 435, 39 A. 893, 20 R.I. 432, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 44 L.R.A. 435 (Kelley v. Schuyler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley v. Schuyler, 44 L.R.A. 435, 39 A. 893, 20 R.I. 432, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 81 (R.I. 1898).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

These are actions of trespass quare clausum fregit, for breaking and entering the plaintiff’s dwelling-house and taking and carrying away certain articles of personal property of the plaintiff therefrom. The facts are substantially these : One Josephine Donnelley died at the plaintiff’s house, leaving there certain articles of personal property. One Thomas O’Brien was appointed administrator on the estate of said Josephine, and he afterwards sued out of the District Court of the Tenth Judicial District a writ of replevin against the plaintiff in the present suits, to obtain possession of said personal property, the plaintiff having re *433 fused to deliver the same. TheMefendant George H. Schuyler, who was a constable, went to plaintiff’s house to serve said writ, but was refused admittance. After obtaining advice from his attorney he went again, on the 12th day of February, 1897, and being again refused admittance, he, with the assistance of the defendant Donnelley, broke and entered the house by prying open the outside door, which was locked. They also forced an inner door, which was fastened, and then proceeded to take and carry away, by virtue of the authority contained in the writ of replevin, certain goods and chattels which the defendant Donnelley pointed out to the officer as the property of said O’Brien, administrator. The evidence is conflicting as to whether the defendants took and carried, away certain other goods and chattels belonging to the defendant in addition to those described in the writ. The replevin suit was pending in said District Court at the time of' the trial of these cases, and, so far as appears, has not yet-been tried, so that there has been no judicial determination as to the ownership of the goods and chattels replevied. At-the trial of the cases in the Common Pleas Division the plaintiff recovered a verdict in each for the sum of $100 ; and the defendants respectively have petitioned for a new trial on several grounds, two only of which are now relied on, viz., (1) that the court erred in admitting evidence as to the value of the goods taken, and (2) that it refused to charge the jury that the officer charged with the service of said writ of replevin was justified in breaking and entering the plaintiff’s house after a demand and refusal of admittance, for the purpose of making service of said writ; and that said writ was a full and complete protection to the defendant. The court, on the contrary, charged the jury, in substance, that the officer had no right to break and enter the plaintiff’s house for the .purpose of serving said writ, and that both he and the defendant Donnelley committed a trespass in so doing. The defendants duly excepted to the rulings. The only question before us, therefore, is as to the correctness of said rulings.

We think the first ruling complained of was correct. The evidence offered as to the value of the articles taken away by *434 the defendants, as we understand it, was finally limited to those articles which the plaintiff claimed belonged to him or his family, and which were not included in the replevin writ. As to such articles, of course the plaintiff had the right to prove their value.

We think the second ruling also was correct. For, while there seems to be some slight conflict in the authorities as to whether an officer who has broken into a dwelling-house and made an attachment, or taken property found therein in pursuance of his precept, may not lawfully hold the same (although the decided weight of authority is to the contrary — see the leading case of Ilsley v. Nichols, 12 Pick. 270; People v. Hubbard, 24 Wend. 369; State v. Hooker, 17 Vt. 670-3; 2 Freeman on Ex. 2 Ed. § 255, and cases cited), yet it is almost universally conceded that the officer who breaks and enters a dwelling-house for the purpose of serving any civil process therein, except perhaps as hereinafter mentioned, is a trespasser ; this position being based on the ground that the law will not permit the sanctity of one’s dwelling-house, which from very ancient times has been regarded as his castle, to be violated in this way. In short, the law provides, and wisely too, we think, that the means of obtaining possession of personal property in civil process must be in subordination to the common law rights of the defendant. “Public policy,” says Campbell, J., in Bailey v. Wright, 39 Mich. 96, ‘ ‘ requires above all things that courts and officers executing their process shall respect the lawful rights of all persons. The practical permission which over-zealous officers would receive to commit wrongs with substantial impunity, if their levies should be held good without regard to the manner of their enforcement, would remove every check on lawlessness. To hold that an act is lawful which may be lawfully resisted is absurd. Such misconduct should neither be justified nor winked at.”

Blackstone says, a sheriff may not break open any outer doors to execute either a fieri facias or a capias ad satisfaciendum ; but he must enter peaceably, and may then, after a request and refusal, break open any inner doors belonging to *435 .the defendant, in order to take the goods. 3 Bl. Com. 417. And in Snydacker v. Brosse, 51 Ill. 357, the court says, “ it is believed that what is said by Blackstone regarding said writs, is true of all civil process.”

Cases to the same general effect are numerous; but in view •of the fact that in Clark v. Wilson, 14 R. I. 11, this court held the same doctrine, it is unnecessary to cite them. In this case, Durfee, C. J., said: “It is perfectly well settled that an officer ordinarily has no authority to break an outer ■door or window of a dwelling-house in order to enter it for the purpose of executing a civil writ or process.”

But the defendants’ contention, as we understand it, is that in serving a writ of replevin, at any rate, the officer has the right, after demanding admittance and being refused, to break into a dwelling-house in order to execute his precept. Some authority for this distinction is to be found in a few of the cases cited by defendants’ counsel, but it is too vague and unsatisfactory to be controlling. Thus in Keith v. Johnson, 25 Am. Dec. 167 (1 Dana, 604), cited by defendants, it was held that the sheriff, having an execution under the statute •of that State passed in 1828, had the right to make a forcible •entry into the defendant’s house to levy it on a slave for which it had issued on a judgment in detinet. An examination of the case, however, shows.that while the court was of the opinion that such a right existed at common law, yet that the decision was based upon the statute. We do. not, therefore, consider the case of much value as an authority for the defendant.

Kneas v. Fitter, 2 Serg. & Raw. 263, while it was an .action of replevin, is not only not an authority in support of the defendants’ position, but rather to the contrary, as there it did not appear how the defendants got into the house, and the court said it could not be presumed that they broke the «outer door.

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Bluebook (online)
44 L.R.A. 435, 39 A. 893, 20 R.I. 432, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-schuyler-ri-1898.