Dolan v. Briggs
Dolan v. Briggs
Opinion of the Court
This cause comes before us on a bill of exceptions to the opinion of the Court of Common Pleas.
The plaintiff in error has brought another point before us, not included in the bill of exceptions; it is this, that the plaintiff below by his own showing brought this action before the cause of it accrued. The declaration lays the trover and conversion on the 1st of April 1808, and the action it is said was brought before that time. But how does that appear ? No otherwise than by the sheriff’s return to the original writ, in which he says that he arrested the defendant on the 17th of March 1808. I do not think this so conclusive as to oblige us to say, it appears on the face of the record that the writ issued before the time laid in the declaration. There were other and better ways of bringing the truth on the *record. The sheriff is not required by any law to particularize the day of the arrest. His aliegation is immaterial in that respect, and the plaintiff is not bound by it. If the defendant had prayed oyer of the pre
after stating the case, delivered his opinion as follows:
The qilain state of facts then is, that these sails were not in the possession or custody of the marshal or his deputy, either at the time of taking the inventory, or the sale; but were actually in Dolan’s possession, who claimed them under a supposed sale from the captain, and who would not even permit the officer to see them, though he requested it. The marshal was commanded to sell so much of the property as was necessary, and he had sold enough to satisfy all the purposes of the decree of the District Court. Is it not competent to the officer to show that everything was not sold, but that certain articles were distinctly excep>ted? The purposes of the writ were fully answered by what he had sold ; the wages of the seamen and costs of suit were discharged by the amount of the sales. It cannot be compared to the ease, wherein the verbal declarations of an auctioneer were held inadmissible to contradict a written advertisement. The very terms of sale here were, that the sails of the vessel were not to be sold with her hull, and no one could be deceived thereby. Can it be endured upon any principles of common honesty, that Dolan, who has prevented, the sails from being put up at auction, shall derive a right thereto under a sale, the express terms whereof were that the sails were not meant or intended to be sold?
But it has been further assigned for error, that it appears by the record, from the plaintiff’s own showing in the court below, that he had no cause of action when he commenced *his suit. The suit was brought to June term 1808, and the declaration states the conversion, which is the gist of the action, as made on the 1st of April 1808. It is insisted that the capias was issued, and the arrest made, on the 17th March preceding. The latter fact is said to be proved by the endorsement of the return on the original writ, wrote in six distinct lines. “March 17, 1808.—C. C. B. B. —William Pidgeon, deputy sheriff—William T. Donaldson, sheriff.” I am not disposed to exercise ingenuity, if any I
Judgment affirmed.
[Cited in 4 Wh. 504 ; 6 W. 548 ; 8 S. 207.]
Reference
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- Dolan against Briggs
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