Court Opinion

ID: 3588344
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:37:41.342837+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:58.357402
License: Public Domain

There is but a single point in this case upon which the court is called upon to decide, and that is, as to the amount of damages the respondent is entitled to recover in this action. The verdict finds that the appellant did not levy the execution placed in his hands: that he made a false return upon it: that he did not return it at the expiration of sixty days; and it was admitted on the trial that the defendant in the execution had both real and personal property out of which the execution might have been satisfied. The amount of the execution was $500.49, and the jury found a verdict of $200. This question has been repeatedly passed upon in the supreme court, and I regret that the decisions are conflicting. In Patterson v. Westervelt (17Wend. 543), where it was shown that the judgment debtor had abundant means to satisfy the execution, the court held, that the plaintiff sustained damages to the whole amount of the judgment; and that having been kept out of his money by the wrongful act of the officer in not executing and returning the process according to its commands, the debt as proved by the judgment constituted *Page 552 
the true measure of damages. In the case of The Bank of Rome v.Curtiss (1 Hill, 275) the court held that the sheriff wasprima facie liable for the whole amount due, and that it was no answer to say that the defendants in the fi. fa. were still able to pay. This doctrine was again laid down by the court in the case of Pardee v. Robertson (6 Hill, 550), together with another upon which the appellant has made a point, and that is, that the respondent might recover the full amount of the judgment without averring special damages in his declaration. All these cases, as well as the case cited of Weld v. Bartlet (10Mass. R. 474) lay it down with this qualification, that the debt is prima facie the true measure of damages, the sheriff being at liberty to mitigate the amount by showing affirmatively that the whole sum could not have been collected if due diligence had been exercised in executing the process. In the case ofStevens v. Rowe, Sheriff, c. (3 Denio, 327), the court held an entirely different doctrine. They held that the plaintiff could not show, that the judgment debtor had real estate out of which the fi. fa. might have been satisfied unless expressly averred in the declaration, and also that the sheriff might mitigate the amount, not simply by showing his inability to collect the money, but by proof that the debt was still safe and collectable. I confess I am unable to see the justice of the rule laid down in the case of Stevens v. Rowe, and if it is good law, the statute which gives the plaintiff a right to recover damages against a sheriff who neglects to execute process delivered to him, is a mere nullity. It in truth affords him no remedy whatever, and allows an unfaithful and defaulting officer to take advantage of his own wrong, a privilege that the law accords to no other person. According to this construction, if the officer is sued for a neglect of duty, he can say, the defendant in the execution had no property out of which he could collect the money, and that it is conceded is a good defense, or he can say he has property out of which you can still collect it, and therefore nothing but nominal damages can be recovered against me, which can only be the damages the plaintiff has sustained by the delay in collecting the money, simply the interest *Page 553 
upon the interest of the money due when it ought to have been collected. To such a doctrine I can never yield my assent, for a plaintiff, if this is tolerated, might never be able to collect his debt. The second execution issued upon the same judgment would admit of the same defense, and so on, as often as they might be issued, provided the judgment debtor did not in the mean time get rid of his property. The rule laid down by the court in the cases first cited, is by far the most salutary, and to my mind a just and fair exposition of the statute giving a remedy against defaulting officers. The statute says that the plaintiff shall recover "for the damages sustained by him" without specifying any particular amount. The case of Kellogg v.Manro (9 Johns. Rep. 300) which is cited in The Bank ofRome v. Curtiss, held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover more than nominal damages, for the court say, "primafacie, he is entitled to recover his whole debt, which ispresumed to be lost by the escape;" and in the case in the 10th of Mass. Rep 474, Parker, justice, held a similar doctrine, "that where an officer had neglected to do his duty, so that theeffect of the judgment appears to be lost, the judgment in the suit so rendered ineffectual is prima facie evidence of the measure of injury which the plaintiff has sustained; but it may be met by evidence of the total inability of the debtor to pay." Both of these cases, after laying down the rule that the debt of the plaintiff shall be assumed to be lost, where the officer neglects his duty, allow him but one defense, and that a good excuse for not doing it, to wit, that the defendant had no property out of which he could have made the money, had he endeavored ever so faithfully to do his duty. Neither allows him to take advantage of his own wrong, by saying, true, I did not do as I was commanded by the execution, which if I had done the plaintiff would have got his money, but there is property enough of the judgment debtor out of which the plaintiff can get it, if any officer will obey the command of the process put into his hands, but still the plaintiff can collect only nominal damages against me, and not even that unless he has alleged special damages in his declaration. Those cases place the officer's liability upon *Page 554 
the right ground. They assume that the debt is lost to the plaintiff if the officer having an execution against the debtor who has abundant means to pay, does not collect it; and they will not allow him to set up a neglect of duty on his part, which very neglect was the reason why the debt was not collected, as a defence. The law always presumes that he has done his duty until the contrary is shown, and it should never allow a wilful neglect of it as an excuse for liability to the party injured thereby. If, as these cases hold, it is no answer for him that the plaintiff has property sufficient to satisfy the execution, then it is unnecessary for the plaintiff to allege it in the declaration as special damages, for when a prima facie case is made out by showing his neglect of duty, he can only defend himself by showing the inability of the judgment debtor to pay. If he attempts to show this, then clearly the plaintiff would have a right to rebut it, by showing that the defendant in the execution had property sufficient to pay it. If these views are sound, how are they applicable to this case? The plaintiff here has not recovered as much as the true rule of damages in this case would have allowed him. He has recovered but $200 instead of $500. But the appellant insists that there was error in the justice's saying to the jury, "that in an action against a public officer they should give liberal damages." Suppose this as an abstract principle of law is erroneous? It does not therefore follow that the respondent has been injured thereby, or that on that account this court will reverse the judgment. A verdict will not be set aside, even on a bill of exceptions, for the misdirection of the judge as to the measure of damages, when from the generality of the charge the jury might have received an erroneous impression, if it be manifest from the finding of the jury that injustice has not been done. The judgment of the supreme court should be affirmed.
RUGGLES, Ch. J. and JEWETT, JOHNSON and WELLES, JJ., concurred in the opinion of Judge WATSON.
GARDINER and MORSE, JJ., dissented, but wrote no opinion.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 555