Perkins v. Weston
Perkins v. Weston
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of trespass for taking and carrying away, in May, 1847, eight school registers, and seems to have been brought for the purpose of trying the question whether the plaintiffs or the defendants, at the time of the alleged trespass, were the legal school committee of the town of Savoy. The defendants pleaded the general issue, and filed a specification of defence, in which, among other things, they averred “ that the property alleged to have been taken was not the property of the plaintiffs, but of the town.” At the trial in the court of common pleas, it appeared that the defendants, claiming to be the school committee, took the registers from the plaintiffs, who made the same claim. The defendants contended, pursuant to their specification, that the registers were the property of the town, and that the plaintiffs, even if they were the legal school committee, had no such property in the registers as would enable them to maintain this action. The presiding judge so ruled; a verdict was returned for the defendants ; and the case comes before us upon exceptions to this ruling.
We are of opinion that the ruling was right. A party cannot maintain an action of trespass for taking and carrying away chattels from him, unless he had actual or constructive possession thereof, at the time of the taking, and also a general or qualified property therein. As against a mere stranger and wrong-doer, possession is sufficient evidence of property. But the possession of a servant is the legal possession of the
In the present case, we are of opinion that the school committee had no property, general or qualified, in the school registers, and no such possession thereof, distinct from the possession of the town, as is required by law in order to enable them to maintain this action and recover damages to their own use; but that they had only the custody or charge of the registers, as officers and servants of the town. By the Rev. Sts. c. 23, § 65, the secretary of the commonwealth is directed to furnish every town, yearly, with blank forms of returns of schools, which, by §§ 62—64, the school committees are required to make to him. And by § 66, no apportionment of the school fund can be made to any town which shall have failed to make school returns for the year next preceding the time of such apportionment. The St. of 1837, c. 227, prescribed a new form of returns, but made no other alteration in the preexisting law. The St. of 1838, c. 105, imposed further duties on school committees, and directed that the forms of the blanks and the inquiries provided by St. 1837, c. 227, should thereafter be prescribed by the board of education, and that school committees should fill the blanks and answer the inquiries, in the same manner and under the same provisions, as they were before required by law to do. The board of education were also directed to prescribe a blank form of a register to be kept in schools, and the.secretary of the commonwealth was directed to forward
Such was the law when the alleged trespass was committee by the defendants, and when this action was commenced And we are of opinion, on the grounds already stated, that the plaintiffs (even if they were the legal school committee) cannot maintain an action of trespass for the taking of the registers from them, any more than the bookkeeper of a merchant or of a bank can maintain the like action for the taking from him of the merchant’s or the bank’s books.
Exceptions overruled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.