Obart v. Letson
Obart v. Letson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court, was delivered by
A writ of attachment having issued from the Middlesex Pleas, returnable December T, 1838 against one Wareham Fifield, the Sheriff by virtue thereof, attached one bay mare which was claimed by Obart the plaintiff in Certiorari. Upon the trial of his claim, before the sheriff’s inquest, Obart offered in evidence, after the same was duly proved, a receipt from Fifield for one hundred and ten dollars, for a bay mar© about six years old, dated October 30, 1838.
The receipt having been ever-ruled by the sheriff, it is agreed that the case here, shall be decided on the errors assigned.
1. That the sheriff holding said inquest, had no authority to exclude testimony.
2. That the receipt which he excluded, was competent evidence.
That the Legislature intended the sheriff should have authority to exclude testimony in such a case, is evident from the language of the 5th sec. of the supplement to the attachment act passed 13 February, 1830, Harr. Comp. 293, which enacts, among other things, that “the sheriff or other officer shall have power not only to administer the usual oath or affirmations to the jurors, but to swear or affirm the witnesses offered by either party,and admitted by him.” This language most clearly recognizes his right to admit or reject testimony.
The case of Tillotson v Cheetham, 2 J. R. 63, cited upon the part of the plaintiff, simply shows that the powers of the sheriff on the ordinary inquest of damages, after a judgment by default, are ministerial, and may be exercised by deputy; not that he may not admit or reject evidence, which is really requisite to the performance of his ministerial act. The power to admit or reject evidence, in such cases, is in the sheriff, not the jury. Snowden v Johnson, 2 Penn. 469; Williams v Cooper, 3 Dowl. 204; 3 Chitty's Pract. 48, 673.
And of course nothing is competent, except such as would bo competent upon the trial of an issue in Court; 2 Saund. on Pl. and Ev. 686. The sheriff had authority in this case, to reject illegal evidence, but the receipt offered was not illegal evidence— it was clearly competent. The issue was, did Fiñeld own the mare ? The receipt was priniafacie evidence that he had sold her to the claimant, and received the purchase money, it was not necessary to produccFifield himself, even if he had been disposed to come, if fraud, or collusion were alleged, it was the duty of Obart to prove it.
For the rejection of this evidence, the inquisition must be set aside.
Inquisition set aside.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PETER P. OBART v. JOHN S. LETSON
- Status
- Published