Williamson v. Ringgold

30 F. Cas. 19, 4 D.C. 39, 4 Cranch 39
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedMay 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 19 (Williamson v. Ringgold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamson v. Ringgold, 30 F. Cas. 19, 4 D.C. 39, 4 Cranch 39 (circtddc 1830).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

(Thrus-ton, J.,) dissenting.

This is a replevin for the plaintiff’s goods, taken on a fieri facias, against John Wells, Jr., at the suit of Thomas Carberry, issued out of this Court.

Mr. Morfit, for the defendant, has moved the Court for a return of the goods under the Act of Assembly of Maryland, 1785, ch. 80, <§> 14, (and also for a venditioni exponas,) because the goods were, as it is said, in the custody of the law, and therefore could not lawfully be replevied, whether the plaintiff in replevin was, or was not, the owner of the goods at the time of the taking, and whether they were taken by the marshal out of the actual possession of the plaintiff in replevin, or out of the actual possession of Wells, the debtor in the execution.

It is understood to be admitted in argument, that the goods were the property of the plaintiff in replevin, at the time of the taking by the defendant, and that the defendant took them to satisfy the execution against Wells.

It is not stated whether they ever had been in the possession of the plaintiff, nor whether they were taken from the actual possession of Wells, or from the actual or constructive possession of the plaintiff.

If the goods never had been in the possession of the plaintiff, they must be returned to the defendant under the Act of Assembly, 1785, ch. 8, § 14, upon a retorno habendo bond being given by the defendant; for that act strongly implies that the return to the defendant is to be ordered of course, unless the defendant obtained the possession “ forcibly or fraudulently; ” or that the possession having been first in the plaintiff, was got, or retained by the defendant, without proper authority or right derived from the plaintiff; ” in which case the Court is authorized “ to refuse to order a return to the defendant, until a judgment is given in the action.”

• But, upon such return, when ordered, the defendant must give bond and security to restore the goods to the plaintiff, if such should be the judgment of the Court.

If, therefore, the plaintiff cannot show that the defendant took the goods out of his actual or constructive possession, the return must be ordered, of course, to the defendant. Cullum v. Bevans, 6 Har. & Johns. 471.

The motion for a return, upon the ground, that goods in the custody of the law are not to be replevied, is, in effect, a motion to quash the replevin; for if the return should be ordered, it must be without bond; and such an order would be of course, if the plaintiff in replevin were the debtor in the writ of fieri facias; [41]*41for the law, in that respect, is well-settled in this country as well as in England.

But it is not well settled, either there or here, that a man cannot maintain replevin for his goods taken out of his actual or constructive possession by an officer, to satisfy an execution against a third person. In some of the States it is well ’settled that he can. But in Maryland, the Court of Appeals has lately delivered a solemn opinion, that he cannot, in the ease of Cromwell v. Owens, 7 Har. & Johns. 60, 61.

In England, it will be found that every case adduced in support of the rule, that replevin will not lie for goods in the custody of the law, are cases where the plaintiff in replevin was the debtor himself.

It is said to be a rule founded upon the policy of the law; and the reason given by Gilbert on Replevins, 161, in the very passage relied upon in support of the rule, is, that “ it would be troubling the execution awarded, if the party on whom the money was to be levied should fetch back thé goods by a replevin; and, therefore, they construe such endeavors to be a contempt of their jurisdiction ; and upon that account commit the offender.”

Goods seized and held by a trespasser,'cannot, surely, be said to be in custody of the law, except as against the trespasser himself, when they are seized in execution. The policy of the law refuses him the right to question the validity of the judgment, or to deny his interest in the property, by any means that would defeat or delay the execution ; but it does not refuse a third person the means of protecting his rights from illegal violation.

The general rule is, that replevin will lie wherever trespass will lie for taking the plaintiff’s goods. There is, however, this difference between trespass and replevin, that trespass will lie upon possession alone; but replevin requires property in the plaintiff. All that is necessary to support the action, is property in the plaintiff, either general or special, and a wrongful taking from the plaintiff’s possession, either actual or constructive.

The idea suggested by Blackstone, and repeated by several other elementary writers, that replevin 'will only lie for goods taken by distress, has no foundation.

I have not found it supported by a single adjudged case. On the contrary, the cases are abundant, from the time of the Year Books to the present moment, in which replevin has been supported for goods not taken by. distress. , Blackstone, (3 Com. 145, b.) says, “ The wrongful taking of goods being thus most clearly an injury, the next consideration is, what remedy the law of England has given for it. And this is, in the first place, the restitution of the goods themselves, so wrongfully taken, with [42]*42damages for the loss sustained by such unjust invasion ; which is effected by action of replevin.”

“ This obtains only in one instance of an unlawful taking, that of a wrongful distress.”

For this assertion, he cites no authority whatever; and it is believed none can be found.

Baron Gilbert, whose Treatise upon the Law of Replevins was published some years before Blackstone’s Commentaries, defines the writ of replevin thus; “ A replevin is a justicial writ to the sheriff, complaining of an unjust taking and detention of goods or chattels, commanding the sheriff to deliver back the same to the owner, upon security given to make out the injustice of such taking, or else to return the goods and .chayáis.” Gilbert on Replevins, 58. Sellon, vol. 2, p. 153, following Blaekstone, says, “Replevin is a remedy grounded upon a distress; for goods are only replevisable when they have been taken by way of distress. But he cites no authority, except Co. Lit. 145, which gives no countenance to such a doctrine. It only shows that, replevin is the proper remedy in eases of distress for rent;'but not that replevin will not lie for goods not distrained.” On the contrary, Lord Coke says, that when the defendant claims property, although upon the plaint the sheriff cannot try the question, “ yet the plaintiff may have a writ, de proprietate probanda, directed to the sheriff, to try the property ; and if, thereupon, it be found for the plaintiff, then the sheriff’ to make deliverance, (for so be the words of the writ); and if for the defendant, he can no further proceed. But that is but an inquest of office; and, therefore, if thereby it be found against the plaintiff, yet he may have a writ of replevy to the sheriff; and if he return the claim of property, &c., yet it shall proceed in the Court of Common Pleas, where the property shall be put in issue and finally tried.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 19, 4 D.C. 39, 4 Cranch 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-ringgold-circtddc-1830.