President v. Wilkins

9 Me. 28
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 Me. 28 (President v. Wilkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
President v. Wilkins, 9 Me. 28 (Me. 1832).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was read at the ensuing September term in Lincoln, as drawn up by '

Mellen C. J.

The jury have found that the note signed by Ira Fish, George D. Varney and Isaac' Wendall, on the 27th of December, 1827, and payable to the Commercial Dank, was not given fora partnership debt; and therefore the attachment made by Fillebrown, on the 29th of April, 1828, in the plaintiff’s suit upon that note, had no legal priority to the attachments made by the same officer, of the same property, in the three suits of A. J. Wendall v. Isaac Wendall; Asa Perkins v. the same, and Mark L. Hill v. Ira Fish, subject to which attachments was that of the Commercial Dank; because they were all prior in point of time. The report states that judgments were duly recovered in all the four actions abovementioned ; that executions were duly issued on all the judgments, and placed in the hands of Fillebrown, for service, within thirty days next after judgment; that the plaintiff’s execution was returned in no part satisfied; and that the other three executions were never returned. The report also states that after allowing and deducting all payments made on the execution of A. & J. Wendall v. Isaac Wendall; Perkins v. the same; and Hill v. Ira Fish, there is a balance due on them, greater in amount than the value of all the goods attached in said suits. Therefore, admitting for the present that Fillebrown had a right to sell all the goods on those three executions, if he had sold them, it is evident that nothing would have remained to be applied towards satisfaction of the plaintiff’s execution ; and in such a case, the return of the Bank’s execution in no part satisfied, would have occasioned no damage to the Bank, nor subjected the officer to any thing beyond a mere nominal liability. The reason is obvious. But Fille-brown did not sell the property which he had attached, on those executions or on either of them, towards payment of the debts due to the attaching creditors ; and if he had a legal right so to sell them, then, by neglecting so to do, he at once rendered himself liable to those creditors to the full value of the property so attached, in the same manner as if he bad sold the goods, but neglected legally to'account for the proceeds; and, being thus responsible, as' above supposed and stated, it is contended by the counsel for the [32]*32defendant, that Fillebrown cannot be held accountable to the plaintiff for the same property, and thus be twice chargeable for its amount. In answer to this argument, and for the purpose of destroying its force and effect, it was contended at the trial, as is stated in the report, that those three creditors, by their conduct and delay, had released and waived all claim of damages against Fillebrown, for his neglect to satisfy their executions out of the property attached, as far as it would have satisfied them. But the jury, to whom this question of implied release^- waiver was submitted, have by_ their verdict negatived the idea of any such release or waiver. And now, on the principles of law assumed, why do not the facts, thus stated, constitute a legal and decisive defence ? In the case of Rich al. v. Bell, 16 Mass. 294, the facts were these. Bell, a deputy sheriff, attached certain personal property of Gulliver, at the suits of Washburn and twelve other creditors. On the same day, several other creditors of Gulliver, the last of whom were Rich Of al. commenced their actions, and Bell attached the same property in each suit. Between the time of the attachment of Washburn and others, and the time whén the last attachments were made, an agreement was entered into between Washburn and others and Gulliver, as to the disposition of the property attached; and before the return day, all the attaching creditors, except Rich ol- agreed that the property should be sold at auction, and Bell sold it accordingly. Rich ly al. contended that such proceedings on the part of those creditors and Bell, amounted to a dissolution of their prior attachments, and left the attachment of Rich fy al. in full force ; and that so Bell was responsible to them in damages to the amount of their demand. The court admitted, that the conduct of the officer was contrary to law, and that he was liable in damages ; but they observed that if he had kept the goods and sold them upon execution, the plaintiffs would literally have gotten nothing; and merely nominal damages were allowed. This case goes the length of deciding that, in the case before us, the Bank could not, at most, be entitled to recover any thing beyond nominal damages. There is one particular in which the two cases differ. In Rich [33]*33al. v. Bell, the conduct of Bell, which subjected him to nominal damages, was expressly assented to by the prior attaching creditors; and of course, he could never have been liable in damages to them ; whereas, in the case at bar, the prior attaching 'Creditors were not assenting to' and approving the neglect of Fillebrown; nor have they ever released or waived their claim on him for damages for the consequences of it ; and upon the foregoing facts, -and according to the assumed principles on which we have thus far proceeded, he is to be considered as standing responsible to them in damages. Whether the foregoing distinction, and the other facts which remain to be examined, will relieve him from even nominal damages, will be a subject of inquiry in the course of this opinion.

It has been said by the counsel for the plaintiff, that the question of waiver, before mentioned, was a question of law, and should have been decided by the court. If there was próof of such waiver, it was of a circumstantial character, and we think the jury were the proper tribunal to draw inferences from any facts in relation to 'the point; but if we entertained any doubt as to the merits of this objection, it would not change our course of proceeding, or lead us to set aside the verdict on that account ; inasmuch as, in OUr opinion, no facts exist in the case which would have authorised the jury or would now authorise the court to infer a release or waiver of the right of action of the first three attaching creditors against Fille-broivn, if they had any such right. Again it has been urged that, as the demands of those three creditors were not against the firm, but only against two individual members of the firm, the property of Varney could not legally have been seized on either of those executions, but the same was liable to be seized on the execution of 'the Bank, because that ran against all three of the individual members of the firm ; that of course the priority of the attachment of the creditors of Isaac Wendall and Ira Fish could not interfere with or impair the plaintiff’s subsequent attachment, in respect to the property which belonged to Varney; and so, in this respect, the instruction of the presiding Judge was erroneous. On the other hand, it has been contended that, as the firm was deeply insolvent, [34]*34the bank had no right, in virtue of their execution, to seize one particle of the property of the firm ; in reply to which it is said by the counsel for the plaintiff, that for the same reason the three first attaching creditors had no right, by virtue of their executions against two of the firm, to seize one particle of the property of the firm : and that the consequence is that

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Bluebook (online)
9 Me. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-v-wilkins-me-1832.