State v. Buchanan
This text of 17 Vt. 573 (State v. Buchanan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question how far an officer, about to make an attachment of personal property upon process against one having in fact no attachable interest in the same, may lawfully be resisted by the real owner of the property has been settled in this state by repeated decisions; State v. Downer et al., 8 Vt. 424; State v. Miller, 12 Vt. 37; and the same doctrine distinctly recognized in the case of Merritt v. Miller, 13 Vt. 416. From tÉese cases it being fully determined that such resistance against the attachment is unlawful, it must follow that a recapture of the property, after an attachment, would be equally unlawful, inasmuch as the recapture would necessarily include resistance to the officer, if done for'cibly, as much as the greater includes the less in mathematics.
Judgment that the respondents take nothing upon their exceptions, and that each pay a fine of ten dollars and costs of prosecution.
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