Palmer v. Thayer

28 Conn. 237
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 28 Conn. 237 (Palmer v. Thayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Thayer, 28 Conn. 237 (Colo. 1859).

Opinion

Ellsworth, J.

The title of the plaintiff to the property in question, is as assignee of Isaac G. Ford, who failed and assigned his property on the 25th day of February, 1857. It is not denied that the defendants, one of whom is the attaching creditor of said Ford, and the other the officer who served the writ and took the property, have a good and legal defense, if the evidence offered by the defendants to prove the day when the property was attached is admissible in proof; and if, further, there be nothing in the character and position of the plaintiff, as assignee for creditors, to [242]*242exempt him from the consequences which would otherwise ensue.

We state the question in this form, because we have nothing to do with the sufficiency or effect of the evidence when admitted, for the superior court found it to be sufficient, and reserved only the question of its admissibility for our advice; and because receiving proof of the fact as to the time when the writ was served, is not exactly the same thing as receiving proof to contradict an official return, although the distinction will make little or no difference in this case; for, upon the evidence adduced, the court allowed the officer to come into court and amend his return according to the truth of the fact, and so it then appeared from the return itself, that the defendants’ attachment was on the 2d day of December, 1856, and not on the 2d day of January, 1857, as the return first stated. If the' law be, as has been claimed, that the day of the attachment can not be learned except from the return, and indeed that the existence of the attachment itself can not be proved except by it, then enough was done to satisfy even this rale, for the court have found the fact to be as claimed by the defendants, and have allowed the return to be amended so as to speak in conformity to the truth of the fact.

In Connecticut the law is settled, and has been ever since, and probably before, the cases of Watson v. Watson, 6 Conn., 336, and Wilkie v. Hall, 15 id., 36, that an officer’s return, whether on mesne or final process, is only prima facie evidence of the fact stated in it, and may be collaterally as well as directly inquired into and denied, which we suppose is contrary to the common law and to that of some of the adjoining states ; but we believe it is the law of our courts, and therefore, in this case, we see not why the defendants should not have been allowed to prove the time when the attachment was made, as the fact became all important to their defense.

Looking at the subject more generally, the questions stated are of no ordinary interest and importance, and well deserve careful examination. And, as to the first, it may be [243]*243laid down as a general principle of law, that mistakes are and ought to be amendable, provided the correction is asked for within a reasonable time and in proper manner. To err is incident to human affairs, and no jurisprudence is entitled to be reckoned just or wise, which does not admit the possibility of error, and provide such redress, when it is discovered, as is consistent and practicable. The most solemn transactions are not exempt from error; neither judgments, decrees, records, deeds, nor writings of any kind ; and this principle we fully admit whenever we allow these records and muniments of title to be corrected in equity and otherwise as we often do. The court in Massachusetts say, in Clark v. Lamb, 8 Pick., 418, In all proceedings mistakes will occur, notwithstanding all ordinary care; and when they do thus happen, they ought, if possible, to be corrected without injury to either party.”

Why now should the returns of executive and ministerial officers be considered an exception to the general rule ? Where these officers have failed to state the precise truth, as they are sworn to do, in their indorsements on process which they have served, why may and ought they not to be allowed afterwards to do it, both on their own account and to protect the rights of the parties to the process, if it can be done consistently with the rights of third persons ? We perceive no reason for an exception ; and in fact we well know there is no exception, not even in judicial proceedings. During the first term of the court, and all future terms while the case is pending in court, any judgment, decree, order, entry, or return of process is amendable, and, if an error has intervened, ought to be amended and made to speak the exact truth. Such is the uniform practice in all our courts we believe. Nor are the corrections, in all cases, of necessity or in practice, confined to a term of the court in which the case is pending. The rule is much broader.

We do not think it an open question in our courts, whether a sheriff may be allowed to amend his return. It was decided that he could do it in Wilkie v. Hall, (supra,) although, in that particular case, the amendment which had [244]*244been made in the county court was not approved by the higher court — not however for the want of power in the county court, but for other reasons. And such is now the undoubted law, both in England and in all the states of our republic. The cases are exceedingly numerous, especially in the reports of Massachusetts and New Hampshire, but we cite only a few of them. Whittier v. Varney, 10 N. Hamp., 300. Wendell v. Mugridge, 19 id., 109. Clark v. Lamb, 8 Pick., 415. Thatcher v. Miller, 13 Mass., 270. Tilden v. Johnson, 6 Cush., 357. Gibson v. Bailey, 9 N. Hamp., 168. Ohio Life Ins. & Trust Co. v. Urbana Ins. Co., 13 Ohio, 227. Pratt v. Wheeler, 6 Gray, 520.

To the exercise of this power there are undoubtedly limits beyond which it can not be properly allowed; one is, (though it is one affecting the officer rather than the court) that an officer may not, without leave of court, alter his indorsement of service after the process has once been returned to the court, for the process is then out of his hands, and has become a part of the files of the court. Beyond this, amendments of this class would seem to be very much within the sound discretion of the court, to be allowed or not according to the circumstances of the case. Certainly, license should be given only where the amendment is in furtherance of justice, and can be made understandingly and discreetly, and the mistake is most clear and palpable. As to the time for such correction, it may be made while the court to which the process is returned is in cession, or after-wards, when the mistake is discovered, if the court will give its permission ; for the power is the same in both cases. Nor is it indispensable that the officer be still in office, though this circumstance is treated as material in some of the reported cases; but in none of them is it laid down to be indispensable, while in some it is said not to be, and we confess we do not see why it should be, as the amendment will be allowed only in the discretion of the court, and will be made, whenever it is made, under the sanctions and penalties of the law. Gibson v. Bailey, 9 N. Hamp., 169. Adams v. Robinson, 1 Pick., 461. Thatcher v. Miller, 11 [245]*245Mass., 413. Welles v. Battelle, id., 477. In the last case the court remark (page 481) that though the sheriff is out of office, he will act under the penalties of the law in amending the return.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Conn. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-thayer-conn-1859.