Parker v. Ransley

82 Pa. Super. 506, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 18, 1923
DocketAppeal, 136
StatusPublished

This text of 82 Pa. Super. 506 (Parker v. Ransley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Ransley, 82 Pa. Super. 506, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18 (Pa. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

The plaintiff’s action is against a former sheriff to recover the amount of a bill for storage of household goods and other chattels after, as is alleged in the statement of claim, they had been made the subject of a foreign attachment brought by a creditor of the owner. To the statement of claim is attached an exhibit setting forth the various articles of household furnishing which were in the custody of the storage company for safe keeping and which, as it is claimed, were seized by the sheriff in the execution of the writ of foreign attachment, but were not taken possession of and removed from the warehouse, as a consequence of which they had remained in storage for more than four years when the attachment proceeding was discontinued or dismissed. The plaintiff relied on the return of the sheriff to the foreign attachment and to the admission of the defendant’s counsel that the debtor’s property was in the warehouse at the time the attachment came into the hands of the sheriff as set forth in the attached exhibit, as a basis for his demand on the late sheriff for compensation. The defense was that the sheriff never seized the goods; that when his deputy went to the warehouse for the purpose of serving *508 the writ, the only person found on the premises was a man who refused to give his name or to state his connection with the business and who on inquiry refused to inform the officer after the latter stated his business, whether there was any property of the defendant in the warehouse or not. Because of this refusal the officer was unable to ascertain whether there was any property subject to. the attachment. He thereupon made the general return provided for in the act of assembly. From that time until the storage company demanded the amount of the storage bill, $420.39, the sheriff was not aware that the defendant in the attachment had any property in storage. It is evident that the seizure was not of the specific property set forth in the statement of claim. There is nothing in the case to show that this property was taken possession of by the sheriff; on the contrary it may be concluded from the evidence that neither he nor his deputy knew of its existence. It is a case therefore where the chattels on which the attachment was supposed to operate were never in the view or power of the officer who attempted to serve the writ, and whatever may be the effect of the return as between the plaintiff and the sheriff we think it might well be held that the appellee should not be permitted to assert that there was a lawful seizure of the property when there was neither possession nor view by the officer and when the storageman, whose estate the present plaintiff represents, obstructed the service of the writ: Morgan v. Watmough, 5th Wharton 127; Penna. R. R. Co. v. Pennock, 51 Pa. 244; Jaffray’s App., 101 Pa. 583; Lowry v. Coulter, 9 Pa. 351; Wood v. VanArsdale, 3 Rawle 405. But the plaintiff proceeds on the theory of implied assumpsit by the defendant to pay for the care of the goods after the service of the writ and the inquiry therefore arises whether there can be an implied assumpsit without a knowledge on the part of the defendant of the existence of the property and without evidence of his intention to permit the goods to remain in the custody of the storage *509 company. Such an implication could not arise unless there was a mutual knowledge of the facts from which it could be fairly inferred that the officer desired the storage company to remain in the custody of the goods until they were disposed of under the attachment. The court submitted to the jury the inquiry whether the storage company or its representative had denied that there was any property of the defendant in the attachment in storage or had refused to give information as to the presence of such property on the premises or had led the deputy sheriff to believe that there was no property of the defendant in the storage warehouse, with the instruction that if they so found the plaintiff was not entitled to recover against the sheriff in this action. It is objected by the appellant that this is the admission of parol evidence to impeach the sheriff’s return, but we do not so regard it. The return does not identify the property which the plaintiff says was kept in storage. The action is based on the assumption that the defendant knowing the property to be there permitted it to remain subject to a reasonable charge for storage. But if the case were that the agent of the storage company denied that any property was there and refused to give any information to the officer on the subject, we see no foundation for the allegation that the general return of the sheriff on the writ of foreign attachment operated to bind him for the custody of goods, the existence of which the storage company refused to disclose.

The judgment is affirmed.

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Related

Lowry v. Coulter
9 Pa. 349 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1848)
Pennsylvania Railroad v. Pennock
51 Pa. 244 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1866)
Appeal of E. S. Jaffray & Co.
101 Pa. 583 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1883)
Wood v. Vanarsdale
3 Rawle 401 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1832)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 Pa. Super. 506, 1924 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-ransley-pasuperct-1923.