Bickford v. Barnard
Bickford v. Barnard
Opinion of the Court
So far as the claim of the plaintiff in this action includes damages for the wrongful taking and carrying away of chattels by the defendants, it comes within the express provision of the insolvent law ; St. 1838, c. 163, § 3, reenacted in Gen. Sts. c. 118, § 25; and may be proved against their estate in the hands of assignees. The enactment is explicit, that “ all demands against the debtor for or on account of goods or chattels wrongfully obtained, taken or withheld by him, may be proved and allowed as debts,” to the amount of the value thereof ; and it is also provided in St. 1838, c. 163, § 7, Gen. Sts. c. 118, § 76, that such demands shall be barred by the discharge granted to the debtor.
The error into which the plaintiff’s counsel has fallen consists in looking only at the form of the action in which the plaintiff seeks to recover his damages of the defendants, instead of regarding the elements of which these damages are made up. It is the nature of the demand, not the technical form of action in which it is sought to be recovered, which constitutes the test by which to ascertain whether a claim for damages, or any portion of it, can be proved in insolvency and is barred by a discharge. If a part of the damages claimed by a plaintiff in an action for breaking and entering his close is for the value of goods wrongfully taken at the time of such breach and entry, it is to that extent “ a demand ” within the meaning of the statute, and provable as a debt against the estate of the trespasser, and barred by his discharge. The form of action in which such damages may be claimed is wholly immaterial. If it were not so, the statute would not be uniform in its operation. Its application would depend in many cases on the form of action in which a party might elect to enforce his remedy. Indeed, if the position assumed by the plaintiff can be maintained, we can see no reason why, in every case where a wrongful seizure of chattels, however great their value, is accompanied by a technical breach of the close, occasioning nominal damages only, it would not be -in the power of the party injured, by commencing an action of trespass quare clausum, to render the whole claim
Nor can we see any practical difficulty in the administration of the insolvent law, which will arise out of the construction which we think ought to be given to this provision concerning the proof of claims for the wrongful conversion of personal property. When the trespass is of a mixed character, and the claim for damages includes an injury caused by the breach of a close as well as by a taking of chattels, there can be no embarrassment
The case of Hapgood v. Blood, 11 Gray, 400, is widely different from the case at bar. That was an action in which the whole damages claimed were for injuries to real estate. The defendant set up his discharge in insolvency as a bar to a part of the plaintiff’s claim, which embraced the value of timber which the defendant had cut down and carried away. But it was held that such a claim was not provable as a debt, nor barred by a discharge, under the insolvent laws. It was not a demand in whole or in part for goods or chattels which the defendant had taken and converted, but solely for injury to realty, which was clearly not included among the claims enumerated in the statute which could be proved against the estate of the defendant.
In order that the rights of the parties to this suit may be properly adjusted, the case must be, in conformity to these views, recommitted to the arbitrator, with instructions to ascertain the amount of the plaintiff’s claim for damages, for taking and converting goods and chattels, and to receive the discharge of the defendants in insolvency as a bar to the maintenance of the action to recover damages therefor; and also to ascertain and determine the amount of damages sustained by the breach of the plaintiff’s close, and to make an award for that sum in favor of the plaintiff.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ira H. Bickford v. John M. Barnard & another
- Status
- Published