Buzzell v. Johnson

Supreme Court of Vermont
Buzzell v. Johnson, 54 Vt. 90 (Vt. 1881)
Yeazey

Buzzell v. Johnson

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Yeazey J.

The question most debated, and decisive, is whether the sale by the collector, of the property distrained, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, under an adjournment to one o’clock in the afternoon, was so far irregular as to render the collector a trespasser ab initio. The tendency of late decisions has been to modify the rule adopted in The Six Carpenters’ Case, and to discountenance the doctrine of making public officers trespassers ab initio. *91Stoughton v. Mott, 25 Vt. 668. But in this State, and generally, it has been held that where an officer, seizing goods and chattels under process, disposes of them contrary to the provisions of the statute, he is liable in trespass. The only authority to act being that provided by the statute, the unlawful disposition is a positive wrongful act, which can receive no aid from the original lawful seizure. There is a distinction between mere negligence in the discharge of incidental or implied duties growing out of lawful custody of property, or violation merely of such duties, or a mere non-feasance of express duties resting on the officer, on the one hand, and on the other hand the doing of an official act, authorized by the statute but required to be done in a manner specifically prescribed, in direct violation of the statute, Hall v. Ray, 40 Vt. 576, and cases cited in the opinion. The statute as construed in previous cases required the collector to give notice of the time and place of sale, R. L. sec. 377. An adjournment is proper ; but it must be to a definite time. Whether it need be in writing and posted or not, the collector saw fit to adopt that course, and fixed the hour at one o’clock in the afternoon ; not an hour indicating that it was a clerical error; not an obvious mistake, as in the case of Wheelock v. Archer et al., 26 Vt. 380, where it was written “ 4 o’clock A. M.” instead of “ 4 o’clock P. M.”; but a seasonable and proper hour, and the one to which the adjournment was actually made. There could be no legal sale under that adjournment previous to that hour. It is a strict technical question of legality of sale ; and that cannot be affected by the fact that the property sold well; or that it was just as well for the plaintiff to have the sale at ten o’clock; or that the plaintiff ’s attorney at that time discovered that the sale was premature and said nothing ; or that the proceeds were applied in the payment of the plaintiff’s taxes. As stated by Barrett, J., in Hall v. Ray, supra, which was a sale under an execution, where the same rule prevails, the defendant: “ was the agent and officer of the law, proceeding in invitum against the plaintiff’s right to hold and dispose of his own. He could only affect and bind the plaintiff in disposing and applying the proceeds of the property, by pursuing the course prescribed by the law.”

*92This view must result in an affirmance of the judgment below, independent of some other points made by the defendant — which . are therefore not passed upon. Judgment affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
LUKE BUZZELL v. N. M. JOHNSON
Status
Published