Court Opinion

ID: 8058726
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:35:40.910651+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:37:58.095589
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Beasley, Chief Justice.
A stolen horse was tied by the thief to a post in a highway, and there abandoned. A person finding it in that situation took it to the stable of his father, the latter being aware that it had stood tied in the public highway, but it was not shown that he consented to *237or know of its being brought to his stable. The father after-wards had the animal treated as an estray, and it was sold as such under the statute. The present controversy arises. between the original owner and the purchaser at this sale.
In my estimation, the sale, in question cannot be justified. The horse, while tied to the post in the road, was not am estray, within the purview of .the statute. A stolen horse abandoned by the thief in his flight, is a waif: but such waif will become an estray so as to be the subject of sale, if it be found straying upon improved land. But no one but the owner of such land can make the statutory seizure and sale, and the consequence is, that even if the horse in question is to be regarded, while in the public road, as an estray, the present sale will not be helped, because the highway was not improved land within the meaning of the act, nor was the person procuring such sale the owner of the land constituting the highway.
But the horse was taken up in the road 'and put in a stable near by, and it is contended that the owner of such stable had the right to treat such animal as an estray. But it does not seem to me that this is even plausible. If an animal be brought on to the property of another without his knowledge and against his will, the person making such invasion will, under ordinary circumstances, be guilty of a trespass, and cam be punished accordingly; but I think the suggestion is novel that the animal thus in traded can be seized and held as am estray. In the present ease, the son of the owner of tho stable found this horse in the highway and took it into his. possession; this act made him the owner of the horse as against everybody but the true owner. As between himself and his father he was in law the owner of the animal in question, for there can be no doubt that Mr. Dane, in his Abridgment of American Law, correctly states the legal rule in saying, that where there are no controlling provisions by statute, estrays and waifs belong to the finder in the absence of the owner. Chap. 76, § 21. It is to be remembered that a person who> finds property, either animate or inanimate, and takes if *238into possession, becomes responsible to its owner for its safety. He is bound to the exercise of ordinary care with respect to it, and to yield it up when demanded. In cases of ordinary finding, a lien, even for expenses, cannot be claimed. This is the doctrine of Nicholson v. Chapman, 2 H. Bl. R. 254.
It appeared in that case, that a quantity of lumber lying along the banks of a stream had become accidentally loosened and carried away by the tide, and had been found and taken • up by the defendant. The decision was, that the finder was bound to deliver the lumber up to the owner on demand, though nothing was tendered by way of compensation for his trouble and expense. The case of the taking up of a straying animal, is put by the court as an illustration of the usual liability of the finder of lost property to the owner. In referring to the legal effect of the facts then under consideration, the official opinion says : “ It is the same as if a horse had strayed and was not taken as an estray by the lord under his manorial rights, but was taken up by some good natured man, and taken care of by him till, at some trouble, • and perhaps at some expense, he had found out the owner. So it would be in every other case of finding that can be stated.”
It seems to me evident, then, that the son must, in this • case, be treated as the finder of this horse. A special property vested in him as finder; he could have maintained trover or replevin, if the animal had been taken from him against any person so taking it, except the owner. The voluntary possession of it at once made his responsibility to such owner complete and absolute. I cannot see the least uncertainty as to his rights or responsibility. Nor can I have any more doubt, that the title of this person did not become divested by his tying the horse in the stable of his father. If such divesture followed as a legal consequence of such act, then the finder of a lost article can never safely take it upon the property of another person. Suppose the finder of this horse had retained it in his possession for a week or a month, and had then put it in the stable of his *239father, or in that of a stranger, could the animal have been sold as an estray ? But lapse of time does not strengthen the rights of the finder of lost property, and I can see no other ground on which the d'efence can stand in this case, except on the general proposition, that if a person having a general or special property in a horse, shall put it in the stable of another without permission, the owner of such stable may have it sold under the statute as an estray.
Such an application of the statute as this, appears to me altogether unreasonable. This act was originally passed in 1797, and at that time there being extensive tracts of uncultivated land, upon which cattle were turned, they would often stray away, on to the cultivated lands of distant land owners. During the inclement season, between the 1st of November and the 1st of April, such land owners were often obliged, from motives of humanity, to take care of such estrays, and it was to lighten this burthen that this statutory provision was made. The remedy thus appointed partakes somewhat of the nature of the common law proceeding in case of a distress of animals damage feasant. Its object was to give to the owner of the invaded lands a lien for his expense and trouble upon the trespassing cattle, and the power to enforce such lien by sale. It is a summary remedy, and is not to be extended to instances not clearly within the statutory plan. I think it would be an entire misapplication to extend it to the case of an animal left voluntarily upon property by a person in the lawful possession of such animal. The statute was plainly not intended as a remedy for such a wrong. For. such a transgression of the rights of the property holder the law, by its other methods, affords ample redress. Nor do I perceive any force in the suggestion that unless the operation of this statute is widely extended, that a person who finds an animal whoso owner is unknown is at great disadvantage, and has no adequate mode of redress. It is asked, under such circumstances, what is the owner of the stable to do? The answer is, he has the same remedies that he has if the animal is obtruded upon him at any time between April and *240November. The act relating to estrays applies only to the interim between the 1st of November and the 1st of April-It certainly was not intended to be a relief in the case of an animal not being an estray, that might be unlawfully left upon property. The horse, in the present case, was not liable to be treated as an estray, and the sale was, consequently, invalid.
This result, I think, satisfies the demands of justice in this-case. The plaintiff in error was the owner of this property, which was taken out of his possession feloniously and without fault on his part. The defendant, when he purchased at the sale by the overseer of the poof, was bound to know that the title of the unknown owner could not be vacated, except under a legal seizure and formal sale. This was the risk he ran, and such risk is always represented in the price which the thing sold brings. The conduct of the parties who-brought about the sale is not entitled to favorable consideration. The treating this horse as an estray was a subtle contrivance on the part of the father and son, that would stand only if its foundation had been found legally impregnable.
This not being the case, the judgment must be reversed.
This disposes of the case, and it is not necessary to consider whether, if a different view had been taken of the legal principles involved, such result could have benefited the defendant in error, on the ground that thé facts as stated do not make up a case in his favor. The form of the case as stated appears very defective, but it is not deemed necessary to pass upon its sufficiency.
Justices Bedle and Depue concurred.