Taylor v. Jones

42 N.H. 25
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 42 N.H. 25 (Taylor v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Jones, 42 N.H. 25 (N.H. 1860).

Opinion

Fowler, J,

When the plaintiff’s goods were attached by the officer, by direction of the defendant’s partner, Tibbets, they were not only intermingled with those of the debtor, Rand, but actually marked with his name, so that, in the absence of the plaintiff, and without his identifying and pointing them out, it would seem to have been utterly impossible for the officer or Tibbets to have distinguished them from those of Rand. If this were so, both the officer and Tibbets were justified in attaching and holding the goods as Rand’s, until the plaintiff claimed and identified, or offered to identify and point them out, and separate them from those of Rand. Walcott v. Heath, 22 N. H. 196, and authorities on page 211; Robinson v. Holt, 39 N. H. 557, and authorities on pages 563 and 564; Wilson v. Lane, 33 N. H. 466; Bond v. Ward, 7 Mass. 127; Shumway v. Rutter, 18 Pick. 443; Lewis v. Whittemore, 5 N. H. 366.

Whether the plaintiff’s goods were thus intermingled, and by his own fault or negligence, if doubtful upon the evidence, was a question for the jury. It may have been wholly immaterial, upon this point, whether there were any improper agreement or fraudulent contrivance between the plaintiff and Rand, in consequence of which the plaintiff’s goods had become intermingled with those of Rand. It would seem to have been clearly the duty of the plaintiff' to see to it that his own goods were properly marked and kept separate from all others; and, if he neglected this duty, and gave no instructions to any other person to attend to it for him, but left the marking and forwarding to Rand, he must be held responsible for his negligence, and his goods must be regarded as having been intermingled with those of Rand through his own fault or neglect. If the plaintiff and Rand conveyed their goods to the depot together, wholly undistinguished from each other, and the plaintiff left them thus intermingled in the control of Rand, and by Rand’s assent the station-[33]*33agent marked the whole with his name, it would seem to have been clearly through the fault or neglect of the plaintiff’ that his goods were thus marked. If, by himself intermingling his goods with those of Rand, and leaving them thus undistinguished, the plaintiff permitted the station-agent to understand and act upon the understanding that the whole belonged to Rand, or might properly be marked in Rand’s name, by his neglect and omission of duty, he would be justly held responsible for the consequences of that action, so far as innocent third persons were concerned, whether he were guilty of any fraud in allowing his goods to be thus marked or not. Beside, the case finds that after the plaintiff and Rand had started off together in the passenger train, the plaintiff was informed of wffiat had been done, and the way-bill or receipt for all the goods, as belonging to Rand, or as marked in his name, was exhibited to him ; but it does not find that he made any objection to the arrangement, or took any steps to avoid the consequences of it, so that he might well be taken to have assented to it; and his goods might, in law, therefore, well have been regarded, as the jury could hardly have failed to find them, in fact, to have become intermingled with those of Rand, at the time of the attachment, by the silent, if not direct assent, and manifestly by the palpable negligence of the plaintiff himself.

If the plaintiff’s goods were intermingled with those of Rand through his own fault, he had neither the possession, or right of possession, of the goods as against a creditor or an officer having process against Rand, and attaching the whole intermixture as the property of Rand, and, therefore, could not maintain trespass for taking them. This was a defect in the plaintiff’s title, which his own evidence disclosed, but which the defendant might have, shown under the general issue, had that question arisen upon the trial, as it does not appear to have done. Fuller v. Rounceville, 29 N. H. 554.

[34]*34The instructions for which the defendant asked upon this subject were sufficiently favorable to the plaintiff, and those given by the court calculated to mislead the jury, to the serious prejudice of the defendant.

If the jury, under proper instructions, had found that the original attachment of the plaintiff’s goods, by the direction of Tibbets, was rightful and justifiable-; if it did not follow as a conclusion of law from the facts proved, it would have remained for them to determine, under like instructions, whether the neglect or refusal to surrender the goods on demand made therefor, and an offer to point them out, and their subsequent sale under the process, could make the defendant a trespasser ab initio, and responsible for the original taking as wrongful. Had it been clear upon the evidence, as it was not, that the defendant was the party to whom Kendrick applied to surrender the goods, and offered to point them out, it would still have been a question whether he had so conducted as to be liable in trespass.

In order to make one who has acted with propriety under legal process liable, ab initio, for subsequent illegal acts, it must be shown that he has abused the authority under which he acted. Gordon v. Clifford, 28 N. H. 412. An intention afterward to abuse the authority will not do it. French v. Marston, 24 N. H. 450.

What constitutes an abuse of authority is well settled. Mere nonfeasance does not amount to it. The Six Carpenters’ Case, 8 Coke 290; Gardner v. Campbell, 15 Johns. 402, where it was held that a person, taking the goods of another under lawful authority, does not become a trespasser, ab initio, by refusing to restore them after his authority is determined. To the same point are Dunham v. Wyckoff, 3 Wend. 280; Hall v. Tuttle, 2 Wend. 475; Marshall v. Davis, 1 Wend. 109; Judd v. Fox, 9 Cow. 259; Clarke v. Skinner, 20 Johns. 465; Mills v. Martin, 19 [35]*35Johns. 32; Morris v. Dewit, 5 Wend. 71; Gates v. Lownsbury, 20 Johns. 427.

Such an error or mistake as a person of ordinary carej and common intelligence might commit, will not amount;1 to an abuse; but there must be such a complete departure! from the line of duty, or such an improper and illegal ex- f ercise of the authority to the prejudice of another — such ;i an active and willful wrong perpetrated — as will warrant j the conclusion that its perpetrator intended from the first !■ to do wrong, and to use his legal authority as a cover for his illegal conduct. Where the acts proved warrant no t such conclusion, the person charged with them is not a trespasser. Barrett v. White, 3 N. H. 210, and authorities cited by Chamberlain arguendo, and in the dissenting opinion of Green, Justice; State v. Moore, 12 N. H. 42; Ferrin v. Symonds, 11 N. H. 363.

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17 Johns. 111 (New York Supreme Court, 1819)
Mills v. Martin
19 Johns. 7 (New York Supreme Court, 1821)
Gates v. Lounsbury
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Clark v. Skinner
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Marshall v. Davis
1 Wend. 109 (New York Supreme Court, 1828)
Hall v. Tuttle
2 Wend. 475 (New York Supreme Court, 1829)
Dunham v. Wyckoff
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Morris v. De Witt
5 Wend. 71 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)
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Bluebook (online)
42 N.H. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-jones-nh-1860.