Holt v. Elwell
Holt v. Elwell
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of replevin for four pigs, tried at the December term, 1914, of the Superior Court for Cumberland County.
The plaintiff claimed that he had repudiated and rescinded the sale of the pigs by his man servant, whom he claimed he instructed to sell them to a packing company. The defendant claimed that, if the servant did not have authority to sell the pigs to him, the plaintiff ratified the sale with full knowledge of all the facts, and that the plaintiff did not return to him the check and money paid to the servant for the pigs and given the plaintiff by the servant. The plaintiff claimed he tendered them to the defendant after the pigs were'replevied and the defendant refused to receive them, but the plaintiff did not keep his tender good by bringing them into court, or offering at the trial to return them.
The verdict is not so clearly against the evidence that we are authorized to set it aside as against law and evidence. When the j ury retired to their room it was seven o’clock P. M., and they were instructed, if they agreed upon a verdict, to seal the verdict and notify the officer, who would allow them to separate, and to return the verdict at the coming in of court in the morning.
It seems that the clerk, instead of furnishing the verdicts usual in cases of replevin, gave the jury the blanks used in actions of tort, and they used and returned to the court, signed by the foreman, the one marked “Defendant,” “that the defendant was not guilty,” and the plaintiff asks that the verdict be set aside because it is not responsive to the pleadings and does not settle the title.
The plaintiff states in his brief: “The only issue presented was one of title as between the plaintiff and defendant, and the burden rested upon the plaintiff to establish his title.” The court instructed the jury, “If they (the pigs) were the property of the plaintiff, then of course your verdict would be for him. If they were the property of the defendant, or any person other than the plaintiff, your verdict would be for the defendant, which means a judgment for the return to him of the pigs.”
In Moulton v. Bird, 31 Maine, 296, the court said: “It is apparent by the record that no other fact was in issue, than that of property, which must have been found for the defendant, and he being in possession is entitled to a return.” And in Moulton v. Smith, 32
In this case, as in that, the form of the verdict was inadvertently furnished by the clerk and never engaged the attention of the jury, and the law does not allow a clerical error in a matter of form to deprive a suitor of a verdict won upon the merits of his case. The verdict may be amended by the court, and nominal damages awarded the defendant, and a return ordered Moulton v. Bird, supra.
Motion overruled,.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.