Miller v. Moses

56 Me. 128
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 Me. 128 (Miller v. Moses) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Moses, 56 Me. 128 (Me. 1868).

Opinion

Appleton, C. J.

— The plaintiff, a deputy Sheriff, having, on 9th September, 1862, a writ in his hands in favor of Azor Dyer v. The Androscoggin Rail Road Company, attached at different places quantities of wood as the property of said Railroad Corporation, describing the lots as containing about so many cords, or estimated to contain so many cords, describing the places where these estimated quantities were situated, and made return of-his doings thereon. He subsequently attached the same and other wood on other writs against the same corporation and other defendants, and made similar returns thereon.

The plaintiff having this wood thus attached and described in his returns on the several writs in his hands, the city of Bath, on Dec 16,1862, claiming to be the owner of the same [135]*135wood, sued out their writ of replevin, commanding the officer to replevy the said lots described in the plaintiff’s return, stating the actual amount to be replevied at the several places where the wood was situated, according to the estimated amounts in the plaintiff’s several returns and in his notice to the Androscoggin Railroad dated Dee. J1, 1862. The amount ordered to be replevied was thirteen hundred and twenty-uiue cords. The replevin bond erroneously described the replevin writ as "for thirteen hundred and nineteen cords of wood, as more particularly described in said writ.”

The coroner by whom the replevin writ was served made his return in the following words : — "Androscoggin, ss., Dec. 19, 1862. By virtue of the within writ, having first taken a bond as prescribed by law, I have this day replevied all the wood at the various places within mentioned, and have delivered it to the city of Bath as within directed.

John Hamlin, Coroner.”

The attachment of the plaintiff was dated September 9, 1862. The replevin writ bears the date of Dec. 16, 1862. It is not pretended that the plaintiff, when he made his attachments, or the coroner, when he replevied the wood thus attached, caused the true amount to be ascertained by a survey thereof.

On the trial of the replevin suit, the City of Bath v. Miller, the then defendant, but present plaintiff, justified under the writs before referred to and his several returns thereon, in which he had described his attachments as being of an estimated and not of a definite and ascertained quantity.

The City of Bath, failing in their action of replevin to make out a good title to the wood replevied, the judgment of the Court was, that, " the said wood be returned and restored to the said Gilbert Miller irrepleviable,” &c. This judgment could only refer to the wood actually replevied. It could embrace no more. It did not necessarily cover the amount ordered to be replevied, for the officer might not be able to find the quantity embraced in the writ. It could [136]*136have reference only to the quantity actually replevied, and that was to be ascertained from the return of the officer by whom service was made. The bond given was for an amount different from that described in the writ.

. Judgment having been in favor of Miller in the replevin suit and a return ordered, and the wood not being restored, he brings his suit upon the replevin bond-. He had attached divers lots of wood at different specified places. The quantity attached was left indefinite and uncertain. The wood had been replevied from his possession. It was ordered’by the judgment of the Court, before which the replevin suit was pending, to be restored. This is not done. He is entitled to the wood actually attached or its value, to be accounted for on the several executions in the suits upon which his attachments were made, or in case the attachments were lost, to the debtors as whose property the wood was attached.

The writ commands the replevying of 1329 cords. The bond is in double the value of 1319 cords. The quantity actually attached was 935 cords, of which only 930 were replevied. These facts appear on inspection of the papers, or are found by the presiding Justice to whom the question of the quantity attached and replevied was referred. The amount replevied was all that was secured by the bond, unless it be held that it is security for what the officer failed to replevy.

According to the plaintiff’s returns on the several writs on which the wood was attached, his attachments were of certain lots at different places, of an estimated but uncertain quantity. Neither the creditors nor the debtors in those suits could hold the plaintiff liable, as an officer, for more than the actual amount. The attachments, though indefinite as to quantity, would hold the lots described and no more. The amount attached being thus indefinite, the actual amount is all for which the plaintiff, as a deputy sheriff, could be held responsible. The value of the wood actually attached constituted the measure of his liability. [137]*137lie could not be made liable for non-existent wood by reason of an over estimate of quantity, when his return described not the actual but the estimated quantity. He could not have been made liable by his return for more than he actually attached.

It was undoubtedly within the power of the Court, if convinced of an error iu the return, to permit that error to be corrected for the purposes of justice, by allowing the officer to amend iu accordance with the fact, though such power should be reluctantly and cautiously exercised. Pierce v. Strickland, 2 Story, 292.

The plaintiff sues as trustee. The amount recovered, if the attachments have been preserved, will enure to the benefit of the creditors. If not preserved, for that of the debtors in the several suits in which the attachments were made. As trustee, the plaintiff could make no personal gains. lie is entitled to recover only to the extent of his liability. In Bartlett v. Kidder, 14 Gray, 449, personal property owned in common was attached on mesne process against one of the owners, and replevin brought in the name of all against the attaching officer and dismissed. It was there held that the measure of damages, in an action on the replevin bond, was the value of that one’s interest. " The principle,” remarks Dewey, J., " upon which such facts may be shown in mitigation of damages, is, that full indemnity will be thus given to the obligee of the bond; and this is all that he is entitled to in the hearing iu equity'.” In Davis v. Harding, 3 Allen, 302, in a suit upon a replevin bond, it was decided that it might be proved, in mitigation of damages, that the action of replevin was defeated solely because it was prematurely commenced. So, in Huggeford v. Ford, 11 Pick., 223, where the goods, when attached, were subject to duties, and the plaintiff in replevin paid them, the amount thus paid was deducted from the valuation in a suit upon the bond. In Farnham v. Moor, 21 Maine, 509, in a suit upon a replevin bond, "judgment is to be rendered upon default,” remarks Whitman, C. J., "for the plaintiff, for as [138]*138much as he is in equity and good conscience entitled to recover.”

The evidence to show the actual amount of wood attached should be received, unless there is some stringent rule of law to prevent our arriving at a just and equitable result. Is the plaintiff, suing as trustee for others, to recover beyond the amount of his liability to those for whom he is thus trustee? Are the defendants estopped from showing the exact extent of such liability?

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

Related

Martin v. . Gilbert
119 N.Y. 298 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)
Goodrow v. Buckley
38 N.W. 454 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Me. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-moses-me-1868.