Hampton v. Swisher
Hampton v. Swisher
Opinion of the Court
The Chief Justice delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action on the case, for trover and conversion. Swisher, the plaintiff, therein sets forth in his state of demand, that a certain execution issued by Isaac Read, esq. one of the justices of the peace
Upon the trial, the defendant objected against the plaintiff’s going into any evidence, until he had first proved that he had been a constable on the 13th of February 1817, when the said execution came into his hands.
The plaintiff attempted to do this, by offering a certificate of one Barnabas Swayze, setting forth that the said plaintiff had been elected a constable for the township of Knowlton, in the year 1816, and signed by the said Swayze, as town-clerk.
The defendant having failed in this captious objection (for the justice admitted the certificate as complete proof of the plaintiff’s having been a constable) then offered to prove that M’Gregor had conveyed his right in these, goods, before the plaintiff had levied his execution, to one M’Lean, and that they had' become his, viz. Hampton’s, property before the said levy, and before they were put into his hands by the plaintiff for safe keeping, though he did not know at that time, that they had so became his.
All this was overruled by the justice, and rightly so,
The cause then went to the jury, and they found for the plaintiff, the sum of 38 dollars, 31 cents, for which judgment was entered.
It is therefore the opinion of the court, that the judgment must be affirmed.
Hoppock vs. Wilson, post 150.
Dissenting Opinion
dissented, and delivered the following opinion.
*The plaintiff claims a reversal of the judgment, upon several grounds. I shall examine the case, in reference to only one of them.
The plaintiff below, in his demand, alleges, that he had in his possession, certain specified goods, by virtue of an execution, against D. M. M’Gregor ; that he delivered them for safe keeping to the defendant, to be returned when called for; but that defendant refused to deliver them, when demanded ; and that therefore he brought his action for the trover and conversion.
After the plaintiff had rested, at the trial, the defendant, among other things “ offered to prove, that the property was his, before the constable levied on it, but he, the said defendant, did not know it at the time the property was put into his hands for safe keeping.”
This evidence, which we are to presume the defendant could have given, the justice overruled ; and in so doing, I think he committed an error. The rights of Swisher in this case, can be no greater than those of any other bailor, when he demands from his bailee, a deposit for safe keeping. His character of constable, and his claim under the execution, invests him with no greater privileges, than if he claimed it as his own personal property; and the propriety of the opinion of the justice, depends upon the question, whether a bailee for safe keeping, may not refuse to deliver up a deposit which is his own, and was his own, when it was left in his custody. I think he may. That such bailee may not defend himself, by
In my opinion, the judgment ought to be reversed.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Reuel Hampton against Jacob Swisher, constable
- Status
- Published