Case Name: William C. Rosen, assignee, vs. United States Rubber Company & another; Same vs. Lane Brothers Company & another
Court: Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
Jurisdiction: Massachusetts
Decision Date: 1929-09-10
Citations: 268 Mass. 403
Docket Number: 
Parties: William C. Rosen, assignee, vs. United States Rubber Company & another. Same vs. Lane Brothers Company & another.
Judges: 
Reporter: Massachusetts Reports
Volume: 268
Pages: 403–407

Head Matter:
William C. Rosen, assignee, vs. United States Rubber Company & another. Same vs. Lane Brothers Company & another.
Suffolk.
January 14, 1929.
September 10, 1929.
Present: Rugg, C.J., Ceosby, Carroll, & Sanderson, JJ.
W. C. Rosen, for the plaintiff.
F. H. Pardee, for the defendants.

Opinion:
Rugg, C.J.
These are two actions, each against, the principal and surety on a replevin bond. The principal defendant in each case sued out a writ of replevin against the present plaintiff and thereby took from him certain merchandise. Each gave a bond (wherein was described the writ of replevin) with the condition that, if the principal (the plaintiff in replevin and the present principal defendant) "shall prosecute said action of replevin to final judgment, and shall pay such damages and costs as the said William C. Rosen, Assignee, shall recover against it and shall also return the property replevied, in case such shall be the final judgment, then this obligation shall be void, otherwise it shall be and remain in full force and virtue." In each action of replevin a trial was had and finding made for the defendant, but no order was made for the return of the goods; no damages were assessed; subsequently judgment was entered for the defendant and for costs in a specified sum and execution issued therefor. Tender of costs has been made by each principal defendant and refused by the plaintiff. The plaintiff has made demand for the return of the merchandise replevied arid that has been refused.
The single question is whether, in these circumstances, the plaintiff can recover the value of the merchandise replevied. Stated differently and more accurately, the question is whether these facts show a breach of the condition of the bond.
The replevin cases have gone to judgment. In replevin the entry of judgment for defendant without more is in law a proper judgment provided it is required by the facts. On its face there is nothing illegal or incomplete about such a judgment. It is final. It requires no further action by the court. It needs no elucidation. Whitwell v. Wells, 24 Pick. 25, 32, 33. Standard Varnish Works v. Cushing, 202 Mass. 576, 583-584. A simple final judgment for the defendant in replevin, without more, carries in law no implication for return of the property or for the payment of damages. If the court intended any result of that nature, it must appear in the judgment. The implication from the absence of any such order is that neither an order for return of the property nor an assessment of damages was intended.
The District Court in which the judgments for the defendant in replevin were entered had jurisdiction of replevin cases where the value of the property taken was no larger than here shown. G. L. c. 218, § 19. With respect to those actions it was a court of superior and general jurisdiction. G. L. c. 218, § 4. Every presumption is indulged in favor of the regularity of its proceedings. Its judgments are not open to collateral attack. Commonwealth v. Duggan, 257 Mass. 465, 469. If the defendant in replevin was entitled to return of the merchandise, the time, place and forum for adjudication to that effect was at the trial of the action in replevin. Ashcroft v. Simmons, 163 Mass. 437. Barry v. O'Brien, 103 Mass. 520. The same is true as to damages other than damages incidental to failure to comply with an order for the return of the property. Tucker v. Tremont Trust Co. 242 Mass. 25, and cases there reviewed. Whether the defendant might have been entitled to nominal damages, if that contention had been asserted at the trial of the replevin cases, Jarvis v. DePeza, 251 Mass. 447, cannot now be considered. However that might have been, even nominal damages were not assessed and the judgments in the replevin cases must be accepted at their face value on the facts shown on these records.
The expressions in Carroll v. Berger, 255 Mass. 132, and Sullivan v. Martinelli, 261 Mass. 261, upon which the plaintiff relies, have no relevancy to the facts here disclosed and áre not inconsistent with the propositions here declared. Sentences cannot rightly be detached from any opinion and stretched to other circumstances with a different context for which they were not intended. Swan v. Justices of the Superior Court, 222 Mass. 542, 545. In Carroll v. Berger the entry of judgment for the defendant in replevin was shown by examination of the record to have been made because of want of jurisdiction in the court to entertain the action. In appropriate cases the grounds of a judgment may be shown by evidence outside the record in order to do justice between parties. Newburyport Institution for Savings v. Puffer, 201 Mass. 41, 49. United Shoe Machinery Corp. v. United States, 258 U. S. 451, 458, 459. No question of that sort is here presented. In Sullivan v. Martinelli the replevin action was dismissed for want of prosecution by the plaintiff, a manifestly different situation from that of the cases at bar.
It follows that the plaintiff fails to show any breach of the condition of the bond on the part of either of the principal defendants except failure to pay the costs in the replevin actions. Each principal defendant prosecuted the "action of replevin to final judgment." There has been no failure on the part of either principal defendant to return the property replevied because there was no order for such return. The only condition in the bond not fully performed is the payment of the costs to the defendant in replevin.
Every question argued has been discussed. No argument put forward in behalf of the plaintiff shows any error in the order of the Appellate Division.
In each case the entry may be,
• Order of Appellate Division affirmed.