Smith v. Wenz

73 N.E. 651, 187 Mass. 421, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1013
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 73 N.E. 651 (Smith v. Wenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Wenz, 73 N.E. 651, 187 Mass. 421, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1013 (Mass. 1905).

Opinion

Barker, J.

This cause went to judgment on March 7, 1904, in accordance with the rescript sent down upon the decision reported in 185 Mass. 229. Thereafter steps were taken to tax the plaintiff’s costs, resulting in a taxation in the clerk’s office in the sum of $260.05, which upon appeal was affirmed by a judge of the Superior Court, and from this decision an appeal was taken by the defendant to this court.

The items which the defendant contends are embraced wrongfully in the taxation are of two classes, first, those taxed for officer’s fees for service of the writ by attachment of the defend[422]*422ant’s goods, and second, those for entry fee, copies and briefs, when the case was here upon the report upon which the decision in 185 Mass, was made.

1. The defendant contends that the officer’s fees for service by attachment were improperly allowed in the taxation because, first, there never was a valid attachment of goods upon the writ, and next, because if there at first was a good attachment it was made void and the officer rendered a trespasser ab initio because the plaintiff having made application to have the goods sold under the provisions of R. L. c. 167, §§ 82 et seq., the proposed sale thereafter was abandoned and the goods were stored and kept.

The validity of the attachment is to be decided upon this appeal by the statements of the record, and the officer’s return of service is to be taken as true. If false in fact the defendant’s remedy is by an action against him for a false return. Slayton v. Chester, 4 Mass. 478. Bean v. Parker, 17 Mass. 591, 601. Whithead v. Keyes, 8 Allen, 495. McGough v. Wellington, 6 Allen, 505. This doctrine the defendant concedes, but urges that the return contains no sufficient description of the property said to be attached, and that the attachment must be held void for that reason. The return recites that on February 7, 1903, the officer by virtue of the writ “ attached certain goods and chattels in building numbered 9 and 11 Harcourt St., Boston, as the property of the within named defendant Henry Wenz and placed a keeper in charge of the same.” It further states that a summons was served on the same day, and that on February 12, 1903, the plaintiff having made application to have the goods sold the officer caused a schedule of “ said property to be taken for said purpose,” and that on February 21, 1903, by direction of the plaintiff’s attorney he moved and stored as much of the attached property as is described in the schedule, and dissolved his attachment on all the other property attached except the sum of $36 in currency. The schedule referred to in the return is annexed to the writ and is of ninety-five bags of cocoa beans, each bag being described by numbers or marks and weight.

The defendant’s argument is that he had at the building mentioned a candy factory in which was machinery, apparatus and much other personal property besides that mentioned in the schedule; that all this personalty was attached if any, and that the [423]*423whole attachment must he held void because a sufficient description of the whole property is not given in the return.

We do not so think. In Baxter v. Rice, 21 Pick. 197, where the return was merely that the officer had “attached a store of goods, the property of the ” defendants, the action being trespass against the officer and his return not conclusive, the objection being taken that the return contained no sufficient description of the goods, the court said generally that it was important “ that a good degree of exactness and particularity should be observed ” to show the identity of the goods, but that “ from the nature of the subject, it is difficult to lay down a precise general rule.” No opinion was expressed upon the sufficiency of the return in Baxter v. Rice, because the return might still be amended and the cause was continued for that purpose. In Baxter v. Rice, the return stated the property as “ a store of goods, the property of” the defendants. In the' present case the return goes much further. It identifies the goods as being in a designated building, and further states that they are placed in charge of a keeper. From its statements of the officer’s acts subsequent to the time when the attachment was first made the return makes it certain that the ninety-five bags of cocoa beans described in the schedule were articles comprised in the goods originally attached and placed in charge of the keeper. So far as they are concerned the return itself gives of them an exact and particular description.

In this proceeding the return must be taken to be true, and therefore we are to consider that while it states that the officer attached certain specifically described goods he attached also at the same time and place certain other goods of which he gives no detailed description, and no identification save that they were goods of the defendant in a designated building, and that thereafter the officer released from attachment the goods not specifically and particularly described. To hold that such a return made the whole attachment void, would be to impose upon every officer making an attachment of goods or chattels the duty of making at once a detailed schedule of the property attached. Such never has been the practice. Such a requirement would entail great and useless expense, and would be oppressive upon the defendant if not upon both parties. We are of opinion that the return, discloses a valid attachment.

[424]*424Nor do we think the attachment became void because at the direction of the plaintiff the officer, instead of proceeding with the proposed sale on mesne process, moved and stored the property and continued to hold it. The statutory provisions are found, in R. L. c. 167, §§ 82-96. Unless both debtor and creditor unite in a written consent, a sale can be made only after a determination on the part of appraisers that the property is liable to perish or waste, or cannot be kept without great and disproportionate expense. R. L. c. 167, § 87. It is true that the statute says that the property “ shall ... be examined, appraised and sold ” upon the application of either of the parties interested to the attaching officer. The defendant’s argument is that application having been made to the officer by the plaintiff the officer must then proceed with the statutory steps.looking to a sale, and that his omission so to do makes him a trespasser db initio and the attachment void. But either party having a right to make application for a sale the defendant could suffer no harm by the plaintiff’s withdrawal of his application. In many cases an attachment covers both goods liable to sale and goods not so liable. If upon consideration, after having made application for a sale under the statute, an attaching creditor should find that he had secured a lien upon enough goods which were not of a character requiring or authorizing a sale upon mesne process, it would be monstrous and oppressive if he could not withdraw his application without wholly dissolving the attachment. No one can be damaged by such a withdrawal, for if the debtor desires a sale he can have it upon his own application. The statutes relating to attachment upon mesne process are to be read in the light of custom and of common practice, and we think it would be a surprise to the profession to construe the statute not to allow a party who has applied for a sale to withdraw his application upon finding that a, sale was unnecessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.E. 651, 187 Mass. 421, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-wenz-mass-1905.