Hayes v. Tidsbury

Decision Date19 May 1902
Citation63 N.E. 890,181 Mass. 292
PartiesHAYES v. TIDSBURY.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
COUNSEL

J. W. Keith, for plaintiff.

Charles F. Choate, Jr., for defendant.

OPINION

HOLMES, C.J.

This is an action of replevin of chattels held by the defendant, a deputy sheriff, under attachments made on November 4, 1899 in actions against the Bay State Manufacturing Company. At the close of the plaintiff's evidence the presiding justice directed a verdict for the defendant and the plaintiff excepted. The only question before us is whether there was any evidence of the plaintiff's right. No evidence was given of a title on his part, and the question therefore put in the way most favorable to the plaintiff takes the form whether there was evidence of his possession. Association v.

McAllister 153 Mass. 292, 295, 26 N.E. 862, 11 L. R. A. 172. And we assume for the purposes of decision that the evidence would be sufficient if he was tenant and actual occupant of the building in which the property was in use. Id.; Water Co. v. Sharman [1896] 2 Q. B. 44.

There is no doubt that the evidence, if any, was extremely slender. The plaintiff did not appear, although summoned by the defendant, and the judge may have thought the excuse a pretence. There was but one witness called, the owner of the building. He admitted having been annoyed by the proceedings in which the plaintiff had a part, but gave no indication of a want of candor or of an intent to pervert the truth. He said that he had signed a receipt for rent for the month of October running to the plaintiff, but explained that this was after the attachment and that up to that time he had made no lease to the plaintiff, and that he refused to do so. So in answer to a question put by the plaintiff's counsel as to whether there were any other than Mr. Hayes's workmen about the building, he said not that he knew of, but again explained later that he did not know whose servants the people were or know anything about it, except the names of the persons whom he saw. He gave the names, so that it was simple for the plaintiff to prove that the persons were his servants if they were. In short, it would be only by picking out particular expressions and depriving them of their context or the reasonable explanations by which they were followed, that even the form of a case could be made out. The presiding justice saw the witness and could judge better...

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