Moore v. Bowman

47 N.H. 494
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 N.H. 494 (Moore v. Bowman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Bowman, 47 N.H. 494 (N.H. 1867).

Opinion

Bellows, J.

If there was a fraudulent contrivance between the plaintiff and his brother, A. W. Moore, to induce the officer to attach the plaintiff’s mare, instead of one of the Bronson horses, by holding-out that mare to be one "of those horses, either by representation or acts, and the officer, relying upon such holding out, had attached the mare, and suffered the Bronson horse to escape, the plaintiff would be estopped to set up title to the mare in himself. Drew v. Kimball, 43 N. H. 282. To have this effect, however, the defendant must actually have been misled by the plaintiff’s conduct, and induced thereby to change his [499]*499position. If he was not so misled, but still believed that the mare belonged to the plaintiff, or had reason to think so, and with a reasonable use of means within his reach he might have ascertained the fact, he could not set up an estoppel. The truth is, the party setting up an estoppel is himself bound to the exercise of good faith and due diligence to ascertain the truth; and what is reasonable diligence is a question for the jury upon all the circumstances of the case. In some cases he might reasonably rely upon the acts or representations of the party to be es-topped, without any inquiry whatever. In others, it would be gross negligence and want of good faith not to make use of the means at hand to ascertain the truth.

In Odlin v. Gove, 41 N. H. 479, which was a writ of entry to recover a strip of land fifteen inches wide on the street on which defendant had placed the walls of a building, and defendant attempted to set up an estoppel, upon the ground that plaintiff stood by and saw the building erected without objection, it was held, that if, under all the circumstances, including the plaintiff’s silence, the defendant unreasonably failed to use the means of ascertaining the boundaries which were within his reach, he had no cause to complain ; because, in cases of this sort, he is to be charged with such knowledge as reasonable diligence would have given him; and it has been accordingly held that a prior mortgagee of real estate who stands by and witnesses a second mortgage without objection, will not be postponed thereby, if his mortgage was duly registered; see Odlin v. Gove, before cited, p. 477, and cases. Such is also the doctrines of Carter v. Champion, 8 Conn. 554; Begalow & ux. v. Topliff & al., 25 Vt. 273; and Brinkerhoff v. Lansing, 4 Johns. Ch. Rep. 63. In the latter case it is said by Ohancellor Kent that it would require direct proof of intentional deception and fraud on the part of Lansing, before he could be postponed to a subsequent purchaser, his, (Lansing’s) mortgage, being duly registered. He does not, to be sure, say that if such intentional fraud had been shown, Lansing’s mortgage would be postponed; nor did that question arise, though it may fairly be inferred that such was the learned Chancellor’s opinion.

It may, however, be difficult to distinguish between the case as it really existed, and what it would have been had intentional fraud been shown. In that case, Lansing’s mortgagor leased part of the mortgaged lands for sixteen years, and Lansing was a subscribing witness to the execution of the lease, with a knowledge of its contents, and without any objection; and it was held, that, as the mortgage was regis:ered, the lessee was charged with constructive notice of it, and there vas no estoppel. If the mortgage had not been registered, Lansing vould have been estopped; and upon the ground that his conduct amount-id to an affirmation that he had no title inconsistent with that which the essor was then conveying ; and it would, therefore, be a fraud in him o attempt afterwards to set up his mortgage. Whether at the time of xecuting the lease he intended at a subsequent period to assert his mortage title against the lessee, or not, would be entirely immaterial in repeat to the estoppel, for the fraud would consist in denying what he [500]*500had before affirmed by his conduct to be true, namely, that the lessor had a right to make a lease of the land, by which the lessee had been misled. As the mortgage' in this instance was recorded, it might be urged that Lansing may have supposed that the lessee had knowledge of it, and therefore there would be more propriety in charging him with notice, than if Lansing had distinctly affirmed that he held no such mortgage, and something like this may have been the view of Chancellor Kent.

However this may be, we find no case that goes the length of enabling a party to set up an estoppel of this sort, when with reasonable attention to the means of information at his hand he would not have been misled. In the case before us, the evidence of fraud on the part of the plaintiff was not very explicit, and the circumstances stated are equivocal ; and it was proper that the jury should be instructed that the defendant was bound to the exercise of reasonable diligence under the circumstances, in the use of means at his hands to ascertain the truth about the horses. If he rashly decided upon the matter, with a careless indifference to the means of information, reasonably within his reach, he would not be entitled to complain. 2 Kent’s Com. 485. Such, as we understand it, was the charge of the judge, in substance. What would be due diligence, was for the jury.

In regard to the intermingling of the horses, no instructions were given, although that point was argued by defendant’s counsel, and an authority cited, meaning to be understood as requesting the court to charge the jury in accordance with that authority. We think, however, that the instructions should be asked for in a way to leave it open to no doubt; and that if no instructions were given upon a particular subject, and the attention of the judge not called to it at the close of or during the charge, ordinarily it would be understood as waived.

If the horses were accidentally placed as they were in the stable, without fraud on the part of the plaintiff, and the defendant selected two as the horses of the debtor, and attached them, intending to hold them at all events, and not temporarily till he could get further information, and he insisted upon holding them after notice that one of them belonged to the plaintiff, he would be liable in trespass, if the horse did belong to the plaintiff, and he was not estopped to claim it by some fraudulent act on his part. Had the plaintiff’s and the debtor’s horses been intermingled so that the officer, using due diligence, could not distinguish them, he might, perhaps, take all and hold them until there was an opportunity to identify them ; but his right to take possession and hold the plaintiff’s horse would be limited by the occasion for it, and if, instead of taking it for the lawful purpose, he took it with the purpose of holding it at all events, he would be liable in trespass. The instructions on that point were, therefore, correct.

But it is urged that the two horses were so placed by the fault and negligence of the plaintiff, and that as the defendant was thereby misled, the taking was not unlawful. Had they been accidentally placed in adjoining stalls, it is quite clear that this would give the defendant no right to attach the plaintiff’s horse as the property of the debtor, any [501]*501more than to sell it as such. He might have taken and detained the three horses a reasonable time till he could make inquiries and ascertain which belonged to A. W.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.H. 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-bowman-nh-1867.