Kent v. Roberts

14 F. Cas. 342, 2 Story 591
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 14 F. Cas. 342 (Kent v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kent v. Roberts, 14 F. Cas. 342, 2 Story 591 (circtdme 1843).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

The sole question, which arises in this case, at least the sole question in controversy, is, whether the levy made upon Pilsbury’s execution was good and valid. The execution was served by a deputy sheriff, who was a deputy of the sheriff of Penobscot county, and also of Aroos-took county. The execution was directed to the sheriff of Penobscot county; but not to the sheriff of Aroostook county. The levy was actually made by the deputy, as a deputy of the sheriff of Aroostook county. There had been an attachment upon the land upon the original mesne process in the suit of Pils-bury, which was made by the proper officer of Penobscot county, the land then lying therein; but in 1S39, the county of Aroos-took was set off from Penobscot county, and included the land in controversy. After the levy of Pilsbury, an application was made to the supreme court of the state of Maine, at the June term thereof in Penobscot county, to allow the execution ■ to be amended, by inserting Aroostook county in the direction of the execution, upon the ground, that it was accidentally omitted by the clerk of the court. The court refused to grant the application.

It is under these circumstances, that the case comes before this court for consideration, with an additional agreement by the parties, that “all amendments or applications therefor are to be considered by the court, as if the case were on trial before a jury.” The object of this clause seems to have been to bring under review and re-examination the decision of the state court in denying the application for an amendment. But it strikes me. that this court has no jurisdiction to entertain such a question, as it would be. in effect, exercising an appellate jurisdiction over the decision of the state court, upon a process issuing from and un[345]*345•der the authority of the state, and over which the state court possesses, by law, a clear and exclusive jurisdiction. The authority of the supreme court of the state to grant or refuse amendments of process is a matter purely of local law, and of which that court is the sole judge. It is not for us to say, what that authority is, and when and how it ought to be exercised, whether it is a matter of sound discretion in the court, or of positive right in the party applying therefor. In either view, we can have no jurisdiction to re-examine, or collaterally to question the jurisdiction or decision of the court. If we were now to assume such an appellate authority, the supreme court of the state would have full authority to disregard our judgment, inasmuch as it could be, in no just sense, binding upon it, and would be assuming the final right to decide upon the true construction of a state statute and a state authority, exclusively dependent upon state legislation. It might have been, nay, it would have been, a very different question, if the execution had issued from this circuit court, and an application for an amendment, on account of misprision of the clerk in misdirecting it, had occurred. In such a case, we should have been at liberty to consider the case upon principle, and with reference te the authority, given to this court by the laws of the United States, to grant amendments.

It may be proper, however, to suggest, that most' of the cases, if not all, cited at the bar, as to amending misprisions of the clerk in the issuing of process, are distinguishable from the present. In some of them, there was a clear mistake of the clerk in not issuing a judicial process, in conformity to the prior process and proceedings in the same cause, which was his positive duty. Such was the case of the writ of review in Burrell v. Burrell. 10 Mass. 221; and the omission to affix the seal of the court to an execution in Sawyer v. Baker. 3 Greenl. 29; and the omission to enter judgment against the estate of the intestate in the case of Atkins v. Sawyer, 1 Pick. 351. The same suggestion applies to the ease of Campbell v. Stiles, 9 Mass. 217, which was the case of a writ of review, directed to the sheriff of Franklin county (Mass.,) and served by the sheriff of Hampden; and the court allowed the writ to be amended by directing it to the sheriff of Hampden. Upon that occasion the court said: “This is a judicial writ, and the erroneous direction was a mere misprision of our own clerk. Judicial writs are more absolutely under the control of the court than original writs.” This ease would have been directly in point, if the original writ in the present case had been directed to the sheriff of Aroostook county, and the clerk, in issuing the execution, had omitted that county. But can it be affirmed, that the omission of the clerk in the present case to insert Aroostook county, the county of Penobscot alone being in the original writ, was a departure or omission of his positive duty? Was he bound to take notice of the formation or boundaries of Aroostook county, or to extend the exigency of the execution to any other counties by name than those contained in the original writ, without some instruction from the plaintiff ? It is quite possible, that some considerations of this nature may have entered as ingredients into the opinion of the state court on this point It is not, however, immaterial to observe, that in all the above cited cases, the question arose merely between the original parties, without any rights of third persons having intervened. The case of Young v. Hosmer, 11 Mass. 89, admits of the same explanation, as does Crofton v. Ilsley, 6 Greenl. 48; and Mechanics’ Bank v. Minthorne, 19 Johns. 244. The case of Hearsey v. Bradbury, 9 Mass. 95, is certainly of far more stringency. There, a writ was directed to the sheriff or his deputy; but the ad damnum being under seventy dollars, it might be served by a constable; and it was served by a constable. Upon the return of the writ, the direction was allowed to be amended by .inserting a direction to a constable; and the court treated the amendment as a matter of form. But here, again, the question was solely between the original parties. The case of Close v. Gillespey, 3 Johns. 526, involved the rights of another judgment creditor, and, therefore, it stands upon a distinct ground. But there the error corrected was the omission of the attorney in the cause to put the defendant’s name on the record to a plea in the case, it being the case of a warrant of attorney to confess judgment. This case, whatever may be its authority, stands upon a ground very different from the present, where the levy has been executed by an officer to whom it was not directed.

Thus much it seems proper to say upon the present occasion, by way of commentary upon some of the cases cited; although I wish distinctly to be understood as giving no opinion, what I should have done, sitting in the state court. But the court may be pressed by other considerations: First, that here Cooper, at the time of his own levy, had full knowledge of the attachment of Pilsbury, and is, therefore, to be postponed to the subsequent levy of Pilsbury. by analogy to a purchaser. taking a conveyance with a knowledge of a prior unrecorded conveyance; secondly, that as the deputy, who made the levy, was a deputy of the sheriff of the county of Penobscot, as well as of the county of Aroos-took, the levy was good, because it might have been perfected by the sheriff of the county of Penobscot, where the original attachment was made, notwithstanding the ■land fell within the boundaries of the new county; thirdly, that, at all events, the deputy, who made the levy, being a deputy of the county of Aroostook, the levy was properly made by him, although, by mistake, the precept was not directed to him.

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Related

Close v. Gillespey
3 Johns. 526 (New York Supreme Court, 1808)
President, Directors, & Co. of the Mechanics' Bank v. Minthorne
19 Johns. 244 (New York Supreme Court, 1821)
Hearsey v. Bradbury
9 Mass. 95 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1812)
Campbell v. Stiles
9 Mass. 217 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1812)
Burrell v. Burrell
10 Mass. 221 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1813)
Young v. Hosmer
11 Mass. 89 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1814)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 342, 2 Story 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-v-roberts-circtdme-1843.