
    Thompson against Button.
    ALBANY,
    January, 1817.
    In an action of femiant pleaded, an avowry aver" ring the goods taken were the property of the whkh^he’piaim tcok^issue’ &cd ing8 ii'umi haV pla¡ntiff,f0genee su” m a”» «pa] ingha“tdtoyfithe 'court gave judgverdict a sheriff in execution, out of the possession of the defend ant in the execution, hemg in the ia“8t°cannot bercptoiápbjit cution “against execudt8,taesoñ !™s1nnovB.P°B ™ii7fór t"fem.i'ic" replevin, the de-
    IN ERROR to the court of common pleas of Washington COUnty.
    
      Button brought an action of replevin for Cattle, &c., against ® , _ . . , ° x-Thompson* in the court below. The defendant pleaded. 1. Jy on * 7 1 ^eP^ > 2“ An Avowry, &c., that on the 6th of February, 1816, one Samuel Morrison recovered judgment against otie Samuel Whitney, before a justice of the peace, &c., on which an execution was issued against the goods and chattels of the said Whitney, for 26 dollars and 37 cents, and that the said execution was delivered to him, the defendant, as a constable, &c., to be executed, &c., and so being constable, he, by virtue of the execution, seized and levied on the said one yoke of oxen, &c., as of the proper goods and chattels of the said David Whitney, to . /» n 1 > . 1 . , 7 . satisfy, &c., trie said execution, according to law. And the J.l * ° defendant averred, that the said goods and chattels were the p Pt0Per goods and chattels of the said Whitney, See., without this, ¡jiat t[je property of the said goods, &c., or any part thereof, at the time when, &c., was in the said Button, the plaintiff, See. Wherefore, he prayed judgment, and a return of the said goods, Sec. 3. An avowry, Sec., that the defendant, as constable, took the goods, &c., by virtue of the said execution, &c. Wherefore, he prayed judgment, and a return of the goods, &c.
    To the first avowry, the plaintiff replied, that the goods, &c. were not the proper goods of David Whitney, but were the proper goods, &c. of the plaintiff, &c., oh which issue was taken. To the 2d avowry the plaintiff demurred, and the defendant joined in demurrer; and the court below gave judgment for the plaintiff on this demurrer; and on the issue of non cepit, the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and assessed the damages to six cents, on which the court below gave judgment. Nothing was said in the record as to the issue joined on the first avowry.
    
      Z. R. Shepherd, for the plaintiff in error,
    contended, that replevin would not lie for goods taken in execution. Baron Gilbert so lays down the law. It is true, he makes an exception as to executions issued by courts of inferior jurisdiction; and cites the case of Aylesbury v. Harvy,
      
       But in Rex v. Monkhouse.
       the court granted an attachment against the under sheriff for replevying goods distrained on a conviction for deer stealing; so that the case relied on by Gilbert has been overruled. Judgments in the courts of justices of the peace are as absolute and final as those of any other court, until reversed for error. A justice of the peace may punish for a contempt. In Alexander v. Mahon,
      
       the court held, that where goods are taken in execution the landlord cannot distrain for rent in arrear; for the goods being, by the seizure under the execution, in custody of the law, it would be, ex vi termini, repugnant that it should be lawful to take them out of that custody. 
    
    Again ; issue was joined on the second avowry, whether the property of the goods was in the plaintiff' or not; and the jury have not found the fact: they only find for the plaintiff, on the issue of non cepit. It appears, by the record, that the other issue between the parties has not been tried; the judgment below was, on this ground also, erroneous.
    
      Skinner and Martindale, contra, contended, that to support this action it was only necessary to show possession by the plaintiff, and a wrongful taking by the defendant; and they relied on the case of Pangburn v. Patridge,
      
       in which it was deeided, that replevin lies for any tortious taking of property out of the possession of another. The case of Alexander v. Mahon, is different from the present; there the property of the goods was never in the landlord. The reason and policy of the law is in favour of the remedy by replevin in this^case.
    The omission in the record, as to the second issue, was matter ef form, and will not, therefore, render the judgment erroneous.
    
      Shepherd, in reply, said, that the provisions of the act to prevent abuses and delay in actions of replevin, showed that the legislature considered replevin as a remedy only in cases 01 aistress. There is nothing in the statute to countenance the notion that it intended to give this remedy in the case of goods taken in execution, and in the custody of the law.
    
      
      
        Gilb. on Replev 154. (3d edition.)
      
    
    
      
       3 Lev 204.
    
    
      
      
         Str. 1184
    
    
      
       11 Johns. Rep. 185, 186.
    
    
      
      
        Woodfall's Tenant's Law 289. (2d ed.
      
    
    
      
      
         7 Johns. Rep. 140.
    
    
      
       1 N. R. L. 9;. sess.11, cb. 5, c. 3,5.
    
   Thompson, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. This case comes before the court on a writ of error to the common pleas of Washington county. The action was replevin, for articles alleged to have been taken by Thompson, the defendant below, who pleaded the general issue, and also avowed the taking, under and by virtue of an execution in his hands, as constable, on a judgment recovered by Samuel Morrison, against David Whitney, The judgmeut and execution are duly set forth in the avowry, with an averment that the goods were the property of the said David Whitney, the defendant in the execution. There is also a second avowry without any averment as to the right of property. To the first avowry issue is taken. To the second there is a general demurrer and joinder, judgment for the plaintiff below on the demurrer; and a verdict for the plaintiff upon the general issue; but no verdict appears to have been found particularly upon the issue as to the of property.

The first question is, whether this omission will render the judgment erroneous. The case of Hawks v. Crofton, (2 Burr. 698.) is very much in point to show that this omission is to be deemed matter of form, and does not vitiate the judgment. That was an, action of trespass, assault, and battery, to which the defendant pleaded not guilty, and non assault demesne, on which issue was joined. Upon the trial, the jury found the defendant, generally, guilty, and no verdict, particularly, on the other issue. The case came before the IC. B. on writ of error, and the judgment was affirmed. The court said, that where the intention of the jury is manifest and beyond doubt, the court will set right matters of form, and the mere act of the clerk; and the rule as laid down in Hob. 54. is recognised as correct, that though the verdict may not conclude formally and punctually in the words of the issue, yet, if the point in issue can be concluded from the finding of the jury, the court will work the verdict into form, and make it serve. The same rule is recognised by the supreme court oi Massachusetts, in Hodges v. Raymond, (9 Mass. Rep. 316.) In the case before us, it is very evident that the jury would not have found the defendant guilty upon the general issue, if he had made out his justification, according to the avowry. The intention of the jury cannot, therefore, be mistaken; and the omission to enter a verdict applicable particularly to the second issue, is mere matter of form.

The next question is, whether the plaintiff below could ~sustain an action of replevin, as the property was taken and held by the defendant, under an execution. rrhis execution, as appers by the record, was against David Whitney; and we are warranted, also, from the record, to assume, that the property was taken by the defendant below, out of the possession of Button, the plaintiff below, and not out of the possession of Whitney, the defendant in the execution. As a general principle, it is, undoubtedly, true, that goods taken in execution are in the custody of the law, and it would be repugnant to sound principles to permit them to be taken out of such custody, when the officer has found them in, and taken them out of the posses~ sion of the defendant, in the execution. The utmost extent to which the case of Pangburn v. Patridge, (7 Johns. Rep. 142.) can be carried is to permit replevin to lie where an action of trespass might be brought. But if an officer, having an execu~tion against A., undertakes to execute it upon goods in the pos~ session of B., he assumes upon himself the responsibility of showing that such goods were the property of A. And if he fails to do this, he is a trespasser by taking them. The case, then, falls within the principle in Pangburn v. Patridge.

The judgment of the court below must, therefore, be affirmed»

Judgment affirmed»  