Wickliffe v. Sanders

22 Ky. 296
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 11, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ky. 296 (Wickliffe v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wickliffe v. Sanders, 22 Ky. 296 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Judge Owsley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This writ of error was sued out in the name of Mary O. Russell, before she was married to Wickliffe, to reverse a judgment recovered against her in an action of trespass, on the case brought in the circuit court by Sanders.

The declaration is as follows:

Fayette county Set.

Samuel Sanders, by his attorney, complaims of Mary O. Russell, in custody &c. of a plea of trespass on the case, for that, whereas the said defendant, on the - day of -, at the circuit aforesaid, caused her certain writ of execution, commonly called & fieri facias, to be issued from the office of the Fayette circuit court, directed to the sheriff of Fayette, by which he was commanded, that of the estate of Lewis Sanders, he should cause to be made the sum of $- with interest at the rate of six per centum per annum from the - day of -, until paid, and also her cost expended in the prosecution of her suit, and whereas, afterwards, towit, on the day of -, at the circuit aforesaid, the said defendant, caused her said execution to be delivered to George W. Morton, deputy sheriff for—sheriff of Fayette county, and caused the same to be levied upon divers goods and chattels of the said plaintiff, then and there being, towit, fifty milch cows and calves, being of great value, towit, of the value of $5000; fifty bullocks of great value, towit, of the value of $5000; fifty heifers and steers, of the value of $5000; fifty head of horses, of the value of $5000; divers pieces of household and kitchen furniture, consisting of beds, carpets, chairs, tables, table cloths, china ware, pots, kettles, &c. then and there being, of the value of $2000; also farming utensils, to-wif, ploughs, harrows &c. of the value of $1000, and thereupon, afterwards, towit, on the day of—, at the cir-[297]*297íiuit aforesaid, the said goods and chattels of the said plaintiff, were? by the order of the said defendant, and in color of said execution, sold by the said Morton, as deputy sheriff, as aforesaid, so that the same was wholly lost to the said plaintiff, and he deprived of the use, enjoyment, advantage and value thereof, to his great damage, to-wit, 05000, and therefore he sues.

Plea, not judgment for plaintiff, Motion in ar. ment'orer-2* ruled, Objected bought0to have been trespass and Iiot case‘ Hules for the case stated,

Not guilty, was pleaded by the then Mrs. Russell; and on,the trial of that issue, three hundred dollars damages were found against her by the jury, for which sum, the judgment, to reverse which this writ of error is prosecuted, was rendered in favor of Sanders.

After the jury had found théir verdict} á motion was made on the part of the defendant, Mrs. Russell, in the circuit court, to arrest the judgment; but the motion was overruled, and it is now assigned for error, that the court erred in not arresting the judgment.

The ground relied on in that court, to arrest the judgment, is, that the action was misconceived. It was contended, that to recover for the injury charged in the declaration, trespass, and not case, is the proper action; and that by adopting the latter aqtion, Sanders was not entitled to a judgment in his favor, for the damages assessed by the jury*-

Whether we advert to those general rules, by which the action of trespass and case are characterized and distinguished, or t©''adjudged cases, it will he found, that to recover damages for the taking of the goods and chattels of Sanders, as charged in the declaration, an action of trespass is the appropriate action, and that case cannot be maintained. By the act of taking the goods, force is not only necessarily implied, but an immediate injury was thereby done-to Sanders, and it is a general rule, that for immediate injuries, committed with force, whether the force be actual or constructive, trespass is the proper action. Hence it has been held, that tresr pass should be brought to recover for injuries committed by th.e misapplication of the procees of a [298]*298court; as where A, or his goods, are taken upon process against B, 3 Wilson R. 309; 2 Blac. R. 832; 1 Bulstr. 149; 1 Chitty plea. 185. Nor is it material whether the action be against the officer who misapplies the procees, provided the officer, in taking the goods, acts under the command of the plaintiff. By commanding the goods to be taken by the officer, the plaintiff becomes principal in the act, and equally liable with the officer to all the consequences. In trespass there is no accessary; all who aid or assist in doing, or causing the act to be done, are principals in the act, and liable to the same action. It follows, therefore, that for taking the goods, which are charged in the declaration to have been caused to be taken by Mrs. Russell, she is not only liable to the action of Sanders, but to recover for the injury done by the act of taking. Trespass, and not case, should have been brought by him.

an execution other perron to bn levied on the plaintiff’s goons, is trespass not case. Action against the plaintiff in execution, for causing Trover may be maintain-trcsWas3°iIes' pd 1 s‘ Verdict in general terms aUeginga1 •wrongful taking the plaintiff's goods, not saying with force, and selling them, whereby they were lost to plaintiff, not good,because damages for the wrongful taking are assessed, and the malafaci-um, was in the conversion only.

[298]*298But admitting that for the taking, trespass might be maintained, it was contended in argument, that it was competent for Sanders to waive the tort, and bring case for the conversion of the property, and it was argued that the declaration, though not in fonn a declaration in trover, contains every thing necessary to show a right in Sanders to recover in trover, and that in substance, it should be so considered and treated,

R is undoubtedly "true, in the general, that whenever trespass will lie for the taking of goods of the plaintiff wrongfully, trover may also be maintained; but when this is conceded, and were we also to con-ce(*e tíiaí ^ie case Sanders comes within the general rule, which allows either trespass or trover, to be maintained for the taking of the goods, charged in the declaration, still there is an objection to the verdict and judgment not to be gottéh over.

The verdict being general, must be understood to include damages for the act of taking, charged in the declaration; so that if the verdict and judgment *s permitted to stand, Sanders recovers damages for an act, for which, according to the settled doctrines 0f the law, no damages are recoverable, in an action [299]*299of trover; the trespass being always waived in such an action. In the case of Cooper vs. Chitty, 1 Burrow, 31, the action of trover is thus defined by Lord Mansfield: In form, (says he) it is a fiction; in substance, it is a remedy to recover the value of personal chattels wrongfully converted by another to his own use; the form supposes that the defendant might have come lawfully by it, and if lie did not, yet by bringing this action, the plaintiff waives the trespass; no damages are recoverable for the act of taking; all must be for the act of converting. This is the tort, or maleficium,

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ky. 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickliffe-v-sanders-kyctapp-1827.