Miller v. Adsit

16 Wend. 335
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 16 Wend. 335 (Miller v. Adsit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Adsit, 16 Wend. 335 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1836).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered:

By the Chancellor.

In this case, the plaintiff brought an action of replevin for a span of horses which belonged to Jacob Coon, and which were taken by the defendant from the actual possession of Coon on an execution against him. The general question, whether the receiptor of goods, taken in execution, has such a special property in the goods as will enable him to maintain an action of replevin, or any other action in his own name, against a mere wrong doer, who takes the goods out of his actual possession, was the one principally discussed upon the argument. 11 have no doubt whatever as to the right of the receiptor to bring an action of tresspass in such a case 0 in his own name, in which he may recover whatever damages he will be liable for to the officer to whom the receipt is given.1 Any possession, even without right, is sufficient to maintain an action of trespass against a mere stranger who, without any pretence of claim from or under the real owner, violates such possession ; but the law appears to be settled, that to maintain replevin, the plaintiff must not only have the possession, but he must also have either a general or special property in the goods replevied. Hence, it has always been held that a plea of property in a stranger was a good plea, either in abatement or in bar, in an action of replevin. It was so decided by the supreme court of this state in the case of Harrison v. McIntosh, 1 Johns. R. 384, and such has been the established rule of law upon the subject for more than a century. See Bacon’s case, Cro. Eliz. 475; Presgrave v. Sanders, 1 Salk. Rep. 5; Com. Dig. tit. Pleader, 3 K. 11, 12. Either a general or a special property in the goods is therefore necessary to entitle the party [345]*345from whom they are taken to maintain replevin, although the bare possession is sufficient to maintain trespass for a violation of such possession. Judges have sometimes said that replevin will lie in all cases where an action of trespass could be brought for taking the goods. Those expressions, however, will upon examination be found to relate to the manner of taking which is necessary to sustain the action, and not to the ownership, which is required in the one case but not in the other. Previous to the revised statutes, therefore, the possession and tortious taking of the property, must have been such that an action of trespass could have been maintained against the defendant; and in addition to that, the plaintiff must also have had such a general or special property in the goods as would have entitled him to recover in trover for a conversion of such goods by the defendant. Either a general or a special property in the goods, however, is sufficient to maintain an action of replevin against a wrong-doer if the goods are taken from the possession of the plaintiff.

Whether the receiptor of goods taken on execution, or any other bailee or mere depositary of goods, who has no lieirtKereon or any other interest therein than what arises from his liability to the officer or owner for the safe keeping and return of the goods, has such an interest therein as will entitle him to maintain either replevin or trover for the taking of the goods from his possession by a mere stranger, claiming no right under the general owner or the officer, is a question which does not appear to be very well settled in this country. The cases cited upon the argument show that different opinions prevail in the states of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and New York on this subject; and the same difference of opinion appears to have existed in England at a former period. The case referred to by Sir William Jones from the year books, 21 Hen. 7. 14 b. appears to be one in which an action of replevin was sustained by such a bailee, for the taking of the goods out of his possession; but Mr. Justice Story in his learned commentary upon the law of bailments supposes [346]*346that the case in the year boohs was either misreported, or that it is overruled by the case of Hartop v. Hoare, 3 Atk. Rep. 39, and other English cases. He therefore arrives at the conclusion that the doctrine generally maintained by the better authorities is that a depositary has' no property whatever in the deposit, but a custody only. Story on Bail, 72, § 93. There certainly does appear to be an objection to permitting a mere receiptor to maintain an action of replevin by which be will obtain the actual possession of the property, which may be much more than sufficient to satisfy the execution in the hands of the officer; and at the same time leaving the defendant, who may have taken the property under a subsequent execution, liable to an action of trespass or trover by the first officer, who may also recover against him to the full amount of the first execution. am inclined to think, however, though that question does not necessarily arise under the pleadings in this cause, that the receiptor who has become answerable to the officer for the absolute return of the goods seized on execution, has such an interest therein as to enable him to protect his possession against a mere wrong-doer, by any of the usual remedies allowed to a possessor of goods having a special property therein, so long as the receiptor -actually—retains-that possession—himself. But if he suffers the goods to remain in the hands of the general owner, or re-delivers sthem to him to be kept, he cannot resort to an action of replevin, which requires possession as well as property to sustain it. I can imagine a case in which two distinct parties may each have a special interest in goods which belong to a third person as the general owner. Where the actual possession, however, is in such general owner, I cannot conceive of a case in which the law would give a constructive possession to two other distinct parties at the same instant, so as to authorize both to bring separate actions of replevin at the same time, for a violation of their several possessions. If the actual possession is in the judgment debtor, the general owner, the constructive possession at the time of taking the goods from him must be either in the receiptor or in the officer, but cannot be separately in each ; [347]*347and if it is in the receiptor and not in the officer, then a subsequent execution could not reach the property, so as to obtain satisfaction out of the surplus which might remain after satisfying the first execution.

As property seized upon execution is in the custody of the law until it is sold, or the execution is otherwise satisfied, the officer cannot legally do any act which shall have the effect to divest him of the constructive possession thereof and the right to reduce it into his immediate possession, so that if a second execution is put into his hands no new levy is necessary to give the creditor an immediate lien upon the property. In/ the present case, therefore, as the second execution was® levied upon the property in the actual possession of Jacobi Coon, the general owner, and the constructive possession was' in the officer who had levied upon it by virtue of the first execution, Miller, the receiptor, had not such a possession, coupled with his special interest in the preservation of the property, as to authorize him to bring an action of replevin, and thus to defeat the lien of the last execution.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Wend. 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-adsit-nycterr-1836.