Opinion
December Term, 1849.
1. Where A, having a claim for a negro slave, sued out a writ of replevin, under which the sheriff seized a negro in the possession of B, which writ for some cause was quashed: Held, that A could not sustain an action of detinue against B until the slave had actually been restored to the possession of B.
2. In an action of detinue the plaintiff must show an actual possession in the defendant of the thing demanded, at the time or shortly before the writ issues, or a controlling power over it.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Law of JONES, at Spring Term, 1848, Dick, J., presiding.
The action is detinue for a slave, which was brought against one Dickson, and revived against his administrator. The plaintiff had demanded the slave from the intestate, and, upon refusal, sued out a writ of replevin to the Superior Court (425) of Jones, and Dickson gave bond with sureties for the performance of the judgment according to the statute. Before the return of the writ the sureties became dissatisfied, and they obtained a warrant from a magistrate commanding the sheriff to seize the slave again, and he did so. On the day before the writ was returnable the sheriff's office expired. But he returned the writ, and, early on the first day of the court, which was Wednesday, it was quashed; and immediately afterwards, and while the old sheriff had the slave in his possession, this action was commenced by suing out the writ and delivering it to the new sheriff. On Wednesday evening the old sheriff applied to a gentleman, who had been Dickson's attorney in the replevin, to know what he should do with the slave, and was told to deliver him to Dickson. He did not do so on that day, because Dickson was not at court; but on Thursday he carried the slave to Dickson's and delivered him. His Honor was of opinion, upon these facts, that the action would not lie, and the plaintiff was nonsuited, and appealed.
J. H. Bryan and J. W. Bryan for plaintiff.
No counsel for defendant.
As the objection of the defendant is founded on very nice and technical reasons, the Court would willingly sustain the action if it could be done without violating the principle on which the detinue rests. Its object is to recover a thing specifically; and therefore the law gives it only against one who it sees had it in his power, when sued, to deliver the possession thereby demanded of him. The gist of the action is the detainer at the date of the writ; and, hence, as was correctly stated in Charles v. Elliott, 20 N.C. 606, it is incumbent on the plaintiff to show an actual possession in the defendant at (426) that time, or a general controlling power over the thing. In this case the Court is of opinion he showed neither. The plaintiff, it is true, had demanded the slave while Dickson had him, and if the latter had afterwards parted from the possession, mala fide or voluntarily, that would not have defeated this action, because, as laid down in the case cited, it would have been taken to be in fraud of the action, and not tolerated. For it is impossible to bring suit the next instant after the demand, and the possessor ought not to be allowed to elude the action for the thing by covertly putting it out of his actual possession. But that has no application here, because the intestate did not put away the thing, but, either rightfully or wrongfully, it was taken from him without his fault and apparently against his will, and he had not reacquired it when this suit was brought. If the sheriff, for want of a bond from the intestate, had taken the slave from him, it is conceived that certainly the plaintiff could not have dismissed the replevin and brought detinue before the possession was restored, although the sheriff, as he ought, might not have delivered the slave to the plaintiff upon his replevin, but have kept him. For, having caused the possession to be taken from the other party by process sued with the view to secure the ultimate recovery of the slave specifically in one manner, he ought not to abandon that method and resort to detinue on the previous possession of the defendant, but only on its restoration. It could make no difference, as to the right to bring detinue, that the sheriff did wrong in keeping the slave from both of the parties, for by such wrong the defendant was deprived both of the actual possession and of any controlling power over the slave. The sheriff did not pursue exactly that course here; but he did, substantially. After having left the slave with the defendant in replevin, he illegally seized him under color or pretense of the same process, and he actually held him when this writ was sued. The possession (427) cannot be deemed the possession of Dickson for the purposes of this action; for at any moment from that in which the sheriff took the slave to that in which he restored him it is apparent that the sheriff was liable to Dickson in detinue; and it seems impossible to hold that Dickson, as a person wrongfully deprived of the possession of his slave, might recover from one person, and likewise to hold that, without any act on his part in fraud of the law, he was liable to the action of detinue, as at the very same time having the possession. It is in that respect this case differs from that of Garth v. Howard, 5 Carr and Payne, 346, and other cases, in which the defendant was held liable upon the ground that he still had the control of the thing, having only pledged or bailed it. A bailment of any kind by Dickson is not pretended. On the contrary, it cannot be doubted that the sheriff was a trespasser under color of the replevin; and he might have been sued in detinue or trover by either Dickson or the plaintiff, whichever had the title. The return of the slave to Dickson, after this suit was commenced, can make no difference; for the question is whether the plaintiff was entitled to the action when he brought it, and subsequent events can have no influence on that question, unless they were of a kind to show that the possession of the sheriff was derived under the defendant in some manner that did not divest him in law and fact of his general power and control over the property.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Webb v. Taylor, 80 N.C. 306.
(428)