Nicholson v. Dyer

8 N.W. 515, 45 Mich. 610, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 787
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 N.W. 515 (Nicholson v. Dyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicholson v. Dyer, 8 N.W. 515, 45 Mich. 610, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 787 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Graves, J.

March 15, 1879, Charles E. Mason sent by the American Express Company from Detroit a package of $800 consigned to the plaintiff at Alpena. The defendant was then sheriff of Alpena county and held for collection an execution from the circuit court of that county in favor of Bradford & Cady and against said Mason and one Luce for $632.82, and as the wagon of the-express messenger was in front of the postoffice in Alpena on its way to the express office the defendant discovered the package lying on the seat by the driver and immediately seized it on the execution. This was in the afternoon of the 19th of Max-ch. He opened the package the next morning and applied so much as necessary of the contents to satisfy the execution, and offered the remainder to the plaintiff who refused to accept less than the whole amoxmt and immediately brought replevin.

[612]*612No seizure was effected on the writ of replevin, and under the rulings of the circuit judge the plaintiff failed to recover. He complains that errors were committed to his prejudice. The objections stated are very numerous but many of them are irrelevant, and most of the others are so plainly-without merit that they are not pressed.

It is expedient to bear in mind the relations of the parties and the character of the action. It is not between the consignor and consignee nor between either of them and the carrier. Neither is it founded on the contract for carriage. But it is a case of replevin where the consignee has brought suit as owner for the possession against a stranger who has dispossessed the carrier. The action is avowedly based on the right of property and possession.

Mason & Luce carried on business at Alpena, and the plaintiff, as he testified, did “ pretty much all of the office business and a great deal of outside business.” He was their agent. There was evidence tending to show that he had advanced from time to time for the concern during the preceding winter something more than $800, and that it was arranged between him and Mason that the latter should send him the money by express to repay such advances, and that the package in question was forwarded pursuant to that arrangement. There was also evidence tending to show that the money was forwarded to be received by the plaintiff as the agent of Mason & Luce, and. not as his money, and other evidence tending to negative his ownership.

From what has been said it is qnite apparent that the question made prominent in the plaintiff’s brief relative to the defendant’s right to seize money on execution when in the charge of an express company and in the course of being carried from the consignor to the consignee is in no manner involved and-is altogether immaterial. The controversy is not between the execution debtor, or one in his shoes, and the officer. The position taken and maintained by the plaintiff is that on the consignment and dispatch of the money it became his property and was at his risk. He insists that it belonged to him exclusively at the time the defendant made [613]*613the seizure, and the establishment of this proposition he makes essential to his recovery.

Now if he did not own it, the question of its liability to execution is unimportant. Iiis want of interest is fatal on his own theory. On the other hand if he did own it, the question is equally uncalled for. Because the only execution connected' with the transaction was not against him nor leviable on his property. Therefore the point concerning the legal practicability of taking money on execution whilst in such custody is to be laid out of the case. The event of the action could in no manner be influenced by it. As already observed the vital question which the jury had to settle was whether, at the time the defendant seized it, the money did or did not belong to the plaintiff. But in order to reach a conclusion on that inquiry it was necessary they should consider not only the evidence by the plaintiff that he was the owner, and the evidence of others of his admissions that he was'not; but also the circumstantial grounds of inference-That the package was dispatched as the money of Mason, and in order that it should be received by the plaintiff and disbursed in his character of agent in the affairs of Mason & Luce.

If the latter explanation was found to be the true one the necessary consequence was that it indirectly but conclusively negatived the plaintiff’s ownership and right of action. It was no less the duty of the jury to judge for themselves in regard to the credit of witnesses than it was to look into their own minds for the state of belief which was generated by the facts and circumstances. There was nothing to which the law had assigned a fixed evidentiary effect, and which was consequently removed out of the sphere of moral reasoning. Without withholding from the jury anything pertinent, the judge explained the claims made on each side, and submitted the case on the only issues which were involved in it.

The main part of the charge was as follows:

“ The defendant’s theory of this case is that on account of the relations which existed between Mason, Luce & Co. at the time of making this affidavit in replevin, and for sometime previous to that time, that this money was not sent at [614]*614that time for tbe purpose of paying Nicholson, but was sent for the purpose of being used in the business of the firm, in paying off the men; and they offer in evidence the admissions and declarations of Nicholson, as bearing on the probabilities of the case as to whether Nicholson was really the owner of that money at the time when he brought this action of replevin, or whether it belonged to Mason, Luce & Co.
“ The whole testimony in the case goes to you together, gentlemen. You will consider it all for what you deem it to be worth, and after having fully considered the evidence in all its bearings in the case, you will then ascertain what impression this testimony, taken as a whole, has made on your minds. If the impression made on your minds by the testimony in this case, taken as a whole, is that Mr. Nicholson, at the time he swore out this affidavit in replevin, was the owner of the money, that it was really sent to him by Mason for the purpose of paying the debt which Mason, Luce & Co. owed him, then he will recover in this action, in the manner in which I will hereafter state. If, however, you think the probabilities are the other way, then he will not recover anything in this action. For the purpose of informing you further in regard to the law of this case, as I understand it, I will give you some of the requests to charge.
“ But before giving you the requests I will give you the law upon one of the points in the case.
“If the jury find that Mason was owing plaintiff and it was understood between them that Mason should express or send this money to him for the purpose of paying the debt which was then owing by Mason, Luce & Co. to Nicholson, and that Nicholson so understood it and assented to it being sent by express in the manner in which it was sent for the purpose of paying the Nicholson debt, and the jury find that it was thus sent, the jury will find for the plaintiff.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 N.W. 515, 45 Mich. 610, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-dyer-mich-1881.