Moore v. . Westervelt

21 N.Y. 103
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 N.Y. 103 (Moore v. . Westervelt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. . Westervelt, 21 N.Y. 103 (N.Y. 1860).

Opinion

Séldén, J;

There id no doubt that k sheriff, marshal, of other officer of like character, Who toked property by virtue of legal process, is under some obligatitih to see to the protection Of such property against injury Or loss; but to what precise degree of care he is bound under the various circumstances which may attend süch k taking, is not very well settled by authority. Judge Story, in his work tin Bailments, section 130, in respect to the liability tif such an officer, says: He would doubtless be responsible for gross negligence and fraud; but Whether he wtiuld be responsible for ordinary negligence, does not appear to have been decided by any ádjudged cáse; although ás he is a bailee for a compensation, it may ie thought that he ought to be bound, by the common rule in su’ch cases, to ordinary diligence;” and he refers to the cases of Jenner v. Joliffe (6 Johns., 9), and Burke v. Trevitt (1 Mason, 96).

It strikes me that this id stating the doctrine somewhat too faintly.' A sheriff or marshal is not ah agent voluntarily selected, but a public officef, whom the party is Compelled to. employ; one who is clothed with a public trust; chosen by the public for his supptised fitness for thé discharge of important ánd responsible duties; He stands, moreover, between two opposing parties, being mádé by laW the Custodian of the property about which théy are in some measure contending, and which may therefore justly bé considered as "exposed to some perils Which Would not attend a mére ordinary bailment. Uhder these circumstances, the doubt in my judgment is not whether the officer is bound to take ordinary "care, but whether he ought hot to be held to a somewhat higher degree of diligence.

But it is unnecessary to determine here the precise degree óf negligence which Would render a sheriff liable in an ordi *106 nary case where he removes the property from the possession of the defendant, and takes it entirely under his own charge; because, whatever rule may be adopted on this subject, if it is to be regarded as applicable to the present case, the question of negligence should, I am inclined to think, have been submitted to the jury. There are, no doubt, cases depending entirely upon questions of negligence, where the proof is so clear that the court is justified in assuming, as a matter of law, that the negligence is established. But questions of that nature are peculiarly appropriate for the consideration of a jury, and courts are very justly cautious about encroaching upon their province in this respect. That there was negligence somewhere in the present case, provided we assume that if the vessel had been removed during the storm to the south side of the pier, the disaster would probably have been avoided, is pretty certain. The man placed in charge by the sheriff was warned of the danger; but as his instructions, as construed by him, were limited to seeing that the vessel was not removed, he declined to interfere. There is a discrepancy between his testimony and that of the captain, upon the question whether he refused to permit the location of the vessel to be changed. The whole difficulty may have grown out of the want of specific instructions to the man to whom the matter was given in charge. If so, this would be a species of negligence for which the sheriff must be held responsible.

He is also, under the circumstances, responsible for any negligence or want of ordinary skill on the part either of the man employed to watch, or of the master of the schooner; for by leaving the coal in charge of the latter, without other control than that of a man to watch and see that the vessel was not removed, he necessarily made the master his agent, to see to the security of the coal in the place where it then was, and became, therefore, responsible for any negligence or want of skill on the part of the latter in talcing care of the property. It would seem to follow that if the jury should believe that the yes • sel would not have sunk if she had been removed to the south side of the pier, and that due and proper care required, after *107 the storm arose, that she should have "been so removed, the sheriff must be held responsible for the negligence which prevented the removal, whether it arose from a want of proper instructions, a misunderstanding of those instructions, or from any other cause.

But the plaintiff’s counsel insists that the defendant is liable at all events, irrespective of the question of negligence. His position is, that it was the imperative duty of the sheriff to remove the coal immediately from the vessel, and take it exclusively inter his own hands; that he had no right to leave it for any time under the control of the defendant in the suit; and that having done so he became absolutely responsible for its safety. The principal authority relied upon to support this position is the case of Browning v. Hanford (5 Hill, 588; S. C. in Error, 5 Denio, 586). That was a case of goods seized upon execution and left in the possession of the defendant; a receipt being taken from a third person, by which the latter agreed to deliver the goods upon demand, or pay their value. "When the case was firs,t before the Supreme Court (5 Hill, 588), it turned mainly upon the question as to the degree of responsibility assumed by the sheriff, in leaving the property in the possession of the defendant, after taking a receipt; and it was held by three of the justices—the other dissenting—that his responsibility was that of an ordinary bailee for hire. A new trial was granted upon that occasion, and the case afterwards came again before the Supreme Court (7 Hill, 120), where it was, decided upon a single question, relating to the competency of the sheriff’s return upon the execution as evidence in his own favor; a new trial being denied. The case was then carried to the Court of Errors (5 Denio, 586), where, in addition to the question as to the return, the court considered the question, passed upon by the Supreme Court when the case was before it upon the first occasion, as to the degree of responsibility resting, under the circumstances, upon the sheriff. Different opinions were expressed; but as it is difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain upon which of the two questions involved *108 in the case the hew trial was granted, nothing is settled by the decision ds to the point under consideration here.

But, however that question may be -ultimately settled, its decision does not,' I think, control the present case. Assuming that in ordinary cases a sheriff, if he leave goods taken upon execution in the hands of the defendant, makes himself absolutely liable, and that his responsibility would generally be the samé whether the goods be taken by virtue of mesne or final process, as to which I express no Opinion, Í nevertheless think, that finder the peculiar circumstances of the present Case, the sheriff did not make himself liable at all events, by omitting forthwith to remove the coal from the vessel. The sureties of the plaintiff hád nbt justified, and until that was done he could not know1 that the plaintiff would entitle himself to the possession.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.Y. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-westervelt-ny-1860.