Wilcox v. Hemming

15 N.W. 435, 58 Wis. 144, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 193
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 15 N.W. 435 (Wilcox v. Hemming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcox v. Hemming, 15 N.W. 435, 58 Wis. 144, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 193 (Wis. 1883).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed April 4, 1883:

Oetobt, J.

This is an action of replevin, without claim of delivery, for three horses, the property of the plaintiff, taken and detained by the defendant. The defendant justifies such taking and detention by virtue of his being master or keeper of the public pound of the city of Janesville, and having authority and right under the charter and ordinances of said city to receive and detain said horses in such pound, and to sell the same, on account of their having been permitted by the plaintiff as such owner to run or be at large in one of the streets of said city in violation of such ordinances. Some questions are raised on the evidence and charge of the court to the jury, which will be first disposed of before the consideration of the important and principal question in the case, viz., the constitutionality of the ordinance in question by which the defendant claims justification for the taking and detention of the property.

1. It is claimed that the horses were the exempt property of the plaintiff, and could not, therefore, be taken and sold Under' such ordinance. The statute of exemption is not broad, enough in terms to embrace such a proceeding. The exemption is only from “seizure and sale on execution, or provisional or final process issued from any court, or any proceedings in aid thereof.” Sec. 2982, E. S. We are referred to the case of Smith v. Omans, 17 Wis., 395, as authority upon this question. In that case it is held only that property may be exempt from seizure and sale on execution upon a judgment in an action, of tort. It is not necessary to [147]*147decide whether this or any other property of the plaintiff might be exempt if taken upon execution on a judgment for the fine imposed by the ordinance for its violation, because the seizure and sale are made as the necessary proceeding and consequence of restraining the horses from so running at large in the street, and not for the mere purpose of the collection of such fine. The power granted by the legislature to this city in its charter, by ordinance to restrain the running at large of cattle, horses, etc., and cause such as may be found running at large to be impounded and sold,”, is a police power necessary to the due protection of the public at large in the use and enjoyment of the public streets, to which the private rights of property, and the ordinary exemption thereof from seizure and sale on execution or judgments in actions on contract or other incurred liability, must of necessity be subordinate. The injury to the public is as great by the running at large of horses or cattle exempt from execution, as of those not exempt, and no such exception could be made without destroying one of the safeguards of the public, or suspending the exercise of this police power in some cases where the public necessity most required such safeguard and the exercise of such a power. Aside from the fine of one dollar prescribed by the ordinance for its violation, the proceeding is exclusively in rem, and the property so claimed as exempt consists of the horses so running at large in. one of the public streets to the great danger and inconvenience of the traveling public, and they can only be exempt when they do not so encroach upon the public use of the streets. (1) They must necessarily be restrained; (2) they must be furnished with food and care while so restrained ; (3) they must sometime, at an early day, be sold, if not taken away by the owner, to compensate for such expense, before such expense exceeds their value. These three things are necessary to be done to protect the public. Their exemption under the statute would avoid these, and [148]*148fit the same time allow them to occupy, by running at large, the streets of the city indefinitely as to time, and immeasurably as to the public injury.

2. It is claimed that the horses were not kept in the pound established by the common council, but in a shed adjoining the same, on another lot. This shed was used with the building of the pound and as an- entrance to it, and was a .necessary part of it. This is too technical to have force.

3. It is insisted that the horses were not at large with the permission of the owner. Without specially noticing the evidence on this point, suffice it to say that there was evidence to show that they were so at large with his knowledge and permission, and the instructions to the jury upon this question were, on the whole, not improper. What the learned judge said in his general charge, as to a failure to exercise a reasonable care under the circumstances being evidence of such permission, may have been technically too broad, and was certainly not necessary, for there was much more evidence of such permission than such mere want of care. The instruction did no harm.

4. It is claimed that the defendant had not duly qualified as such keeper of the public pound by taking the requisite oath and filing a bond. Sec. 1, ch. 3, of the charter (ch. 474, P. & L. Laws of 1866), provides that “ every person chosen or appointed to any office or place of trust under this act shall take and subscribe an oath,” etc. Subd. 16 of sec. 4 of ch. 4 authorizes the common council “ to establish and regulate public pounds, and to appoint masters thereof from time to time.” The master of the pound is not one of those who are denominated officers in the charter, and from the usual duties and tenure of such a subordinate position it would be •improper to call him an officer of the city. Does he fill a place of trusty in the legal signification of the term? These words, when used in a statute, have the same meaning. An office is a place of trust, and a place of trust, when so men[149]*149tioned, is an office. King v. Burrell, 5 Mod., 431. In the old constitution of Mew York, requiring officers to take an oath, it is provided that “no other oath, declaration, or test-shall be required as á qualification for any office or public trust.”

In Matter of the Oaths, 20 Johns, 493, it is held that the legal meaning of the word “ office ” is “ an employment on behalf of the government in any station or public trust, not merely transient, occasional, or incidental.”

In Matter of J. L. Dorsey, 7 Porter, 371, an office is called “ a charge or trust, conferred by public authority,” and it is held that an attorney at law is not an officer required to take a certain oath as such. This officer is called master of' the pound or pound-master in the charter, and such masters of pounds may be appointed “from time to time.” The duties of such an office are infrequent, “occasional, tran-' sient, and incidental,” as they may be required when some' animal found at large in the street is brought to the pound. Eor each impounding there may be a new master appointed: to take charge of the pound, and care of the animal or ani-' mals so impounded. His office can scarcely be said to have a tenure, if it is an office, so uncertain and precarious is the: right by which it is held. He is a mere keeper, for the time being, of the pound, when his services are required and no' longer. If he is required to take the constitutional oath as an officer of the city, we can scarcely conceive of a subordinate employee of the city government who would not be so required,— such as the occasional keeper of the pest-house, or one who lights and extinguishes the street lamps, or one who takes care of the city hall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.W. 435, 58 Wis. 144, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-v-hemming-wis-1883.