McLeod v. . Oates

30 N.C. 387
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 N.C. 387 (McLeod v. . Oates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLeod v. . Oates, 30 N.C. 387 (N.C. 1848).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

Upon the question of fraud we think it only necessary to remark, that it seems singular, that it should have been left to the jury, without laying the proper stress on the long continued possession of the father after making the deed, as a circumstance tending to show that the conveyance was upon a secret trust for the father, and especially as being deceptive to creditors by keeping up a false credit for the father. But although *389 the possession is not further adverted to as an element of fraud, avoiding the plaintiff’s title, yet it is material, perhaps, on the other point, made at the trial, as to the plaintiff’s right to bring replevin.

The old authorities all agree, that goods taken in execution from a Court of record are not repleviable. Com. Dig. Replevin, D. Indeed, the sheriff subjects himself to an attachment by making replevin of them. Bul. IV. P. 53. The same law holds of warrants of distress on convictions, and process of execution on judgments given by magistrates, having jurisdiction. Rex v. Monkhead, 2 Str. 1184. Wilson v. Miller, 1 Brod. & Bing. 57. The reasons for this are of that imperative nature, that make the rule indispensable to the administration of the law. Execution has been called the end of the law. But it will be only the beginning, and there would be no end of the law, if after a person has established his right by judgment, the defendant’s effects may be rescued from the execution at his will by suing out a writ of replevin. No ease is found in England of replevin maintained by any person for goods, taken by virtue of an execution against the plaintiff in replevin or any/>ther person. In New York it was held in Thompson v. Button, 14 John. 84, that goods of A. taken out of the possession of A. upon execution against the property of B. may be repieveid at the suit of A. but no authority was cited for the position, and the decision put expressly on the ground, that, by taking goods out of the possession of one person, upon execution against another, the officer undertakes to show, that they were the property of'the defendant, in the execution; and the Court explicitly states the general pinciple, that goods taken in execution are in custodia legis, and “ it would be repugnant to sound principles to permit them to be taken out of such custody, when the officer found them in and took them out of the possession of the defendant in execution.” It is true *390 that a contrary rule is laid down by one of the Judges in Clark v. Skinner, 20 John. 465, who held the broad doctrine, that the principle only applied between the officer and the defendant in execution, and that a third person might replevy on his right of property, although the seizure was made while the thing was in the debtor’s possession, provided only the plaintiff in replevin had the right to take possession, when the officer took it. That opinion was then extra-judicial, as the case was, that the officer took the things from the possession of the plaintiff’s servant, while employed in his master’s business, upon an execution against the servant. Therefore the actual possession, in a legal sense, was in the master and not the servant ; and the former might have had trespass as well as trover for the taking, and on that ground the majority of the Judges rested their decision. Subsequently, indeed, the broader doctrine gained favour, and in the case of Dunham v. Wicks, 3 Wend. 280 it, was held by the Supreme Court, that every person, having the property, in goods and the right to reduce them to possession, may have the action against an officer, who takes them by execution out of the actual possession of the defendant in execution, notwithstanding an express recognition of the contrary doctrine by the same Court just one year before in Judd v. Fox, 9 Cowen 259. it may therefore, we suppose, be considered settled in that State. The extension of this action to the case, where one man’s goods are taken upon execution against another, prevails also in Massachusetts ; but upon much more legitimate grounds, than those on which it has been placed in New York. By a statute of 1789 it was there enacted, when any goods, of the value of more than $20, which are attached on mesne process, or taken in execution, are claimed by any person, other than the defendant in the suit, in which they are so taken or attached, such owner or other person may cause them to be replevied. It may be remarked *391 that the very passing of that act is inconsistent with the idea, that the common law gave the action in such cases; and Chief Justice Parsoxs lays it down clearly, that it did not, Ilsley v. Stubbs, 5 Mass. Rep. 280. But after the act, the Courts in Massachsetts were obliged to sustain the action ; for, although, the Chief Justice could not help remarking, the alteration of the common law had been productive of much practical inconvenience, yet it rested with the legislature to decide whether the common law should or should not be restored. With this declaration of the opinion and experience of a Judge, so learned and wise, before us, there ought to be little inclination to depart from the common law further than compelled by legislative authority. Accordingly in this State it was held, that the action of replevin would only lie by the common law, for a taking of goods from the possession of the plaintiff, and not upon a finding, though the owner was entitled to the immediate possession, Cummings v. McGill, No. Ca. T. R. 98. Therefore at common law we should hold, that this action would not lie, both because the goods, when taken, were not, legally, in the possession of the plaintiff, but actually in that of his father, not as his son’s servant, and because the taking was by virtue of an execution against the property of the possessor.

It is contended, however, for the plaintiff, that the common law is altered here also by statute, as respects slaves, and that he is now entitled to the action. The act is that of 1828, Rev. St. ch. 101, and enacts, that writs of replevin for slaves shall be held and deemed to be sustainable against persons in possession of such slaves, in all cases where actions of detinue or trover are proper; provided, the plaintiff shall make oath, that he had been in the lawful possession of the slaves within two years preceding the issuing of the writ, and that he has been deprived of such posssession without his per* *392 mission or consent. Then follow various provisions with respect to the plaintiff’s giving bond for the return of the slave, and for the defendant’s giving bond for the performance of the judgment, if he chooses to keep possession during the suit.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mitchell v. . Sims
32 S.E. 735 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1899)
Carroll v. . Hussey
31 N.C. 88 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1848)
Cummings v. . MacGill
4 N.C. 535 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1817)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.C. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-oates-nc-1848.