| N.D. | Jul 19, 1918

Lead Opinion

Grace, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Bottineau county, North Dakota, Honorable A. G. Burr, Judge.

Facts in the case are as follows:

The respondent is the owner of 320 acres of land located- near Nuroki, Bottineau county, North Dakota. In 1915, the land was rented to one Williams. K. Stack was the agent for the respondent. About November 1, 1915, respondent delivered to appellant 69 bushels and '20 pounds of No. 1 wheat to be held in general storage, the value of which was $.87 per bushel at the time. On the 15th day of March, 1916, respondent by her agent, Stack, attempted to sell the grain in question. Appellant refused to pay for the grain or deliver the same or a like -quantity, claiming the grain had been sold and the money turned over to the People’s State Bank of Westhope, which claimed to hold an assignment of a thresher’s lien on the grain. Respondent brought suit in the justice court for the value of the wheat at the time of the demand, and recovered judgment for damages and costs amouting to $91.46. The defendant appealed to the district court, where the verdict was directed in favor of the respondent. A motion for a hew trial was made and denied.

The first matter for consideration is: Was there any competent testimony tending to establish the making and filing of a valid and existing thresher’s lien? We are clear the record contains no such testimony. It would be necessary to establish, by competent testimony, the facts *536required by law to be established to entitle one to claim and file a thresher’s lien. It would be necessary, among other facts, to show that there were a certain number of bushels of a certain kind of grain threshed, the price per bushel for threshing, the description of the land- upon which such grain was growing, and that the lien which is claimed was filed within a specified time after said threshing was done; and such other facts as are required by the law' to be established in such cases before a lien can be claimed or filed. There is no competent testimony to show that such lien was properly executed. -

The offers of stipulation back and forth between the counsel relative to the lien being filed and assigned, and the assignment filed and the various matters referred to, fall far short of establishing the actual execution and filing, of the lien in accordance with requirements of law relative to thresher’s liens; and, further, such offers of stipulation such as they are do not appear to have been agreed to by the respective counsels representing the parties to the action. They really have no probative force and are really incompetent as testimony in this case.

In the cross-examination of Mr. Stack, a witness for respondent, the appellant’s counsel asked the witness if Fred Jensen did the threshing on the place that year. Objection that the question was immaterial and not proper cross-examination was sustained by the court, and we think properly so.

If the appellant had competent evidence by which to establish the facts necessary to prove a valid and existing thresher’s lien, he could have offered such testimony as direct testimony, and there would have been, in all probability, no objection to the intinduction of such testimony. Whether or not there was a thresher’s lien was a matter that was put in issue by the pleadings, and it was incumbent upon the defendant to prove, by competent testimony, the right to the execution and existence of such lien; and also the proper filing thereof. This the defendant has not done; he has made no competent proof of the lien or the proper execution and filing thereof.

The court, in its memorandum opinion, states that it knows of its own knowledge that Fred Jensen, the thresher, was not produced in court, and there is no attempt to claim that he was there or any attempt by the defendants to prove the lien by any other witness.

It is clear there was no competent evidence to establish the thresh*537er’s lien in question by competent proof, and it is held there is no competent proof of such lien nor of the execution thereof.

In this case, there being no competent evidence of the execution or existence of the thresher’s lien, it becomes entirely unnecessary to construe the provisions of § 6721, Compiled Laws 1913.

The court permitted the plaintiff to recover the highest market value of the grain in question from the date of the conversion. The time elapsing between the date of the conversion and the time of making the demand and bringing the action was approximately five months. It can not be said that the plaintiff was not diligent in prosecuting her action. Under § 7168, Compiled Laws 1913, it was proper for the plaintiff to offer testimony of the highest market value of the property at any time between the conversion and the verdict.

We have examined all assignments of error in all the records, and 'find no reversible error therein.

The order appealed from is affirmed, with costs.






Concurrence Opinion

Christianson, J.

(concurring specially). I concur in an affirmance of the judgment and the order denying a new trial. The defendant admits the delivery to it of the wheat involved in this controversy, and that such wheat belonged to the plaintiff. It also admits that the defendant failed to deliver to the plaintiff upon demand the wheat described in the complaint. But in justification of the failure to make such delivery the defendant avers as an affirmative defense that there was a valid and subsisting thresher’s lien on said grain in favor of one J. F. Jensen, amounting to $152, which said lien exceeded the value of the grain, and that the defendant, upon the demand of the holder of the thresher’s lien, sold said grain and paid the proceeds thereof to such lien holder. The only evidence adduced by the defendant to establish such lien was the lien itself as filed in the office of the register of deeds. No evidence was adduced to show that the matters recited in the lien claim were in fact trae. The lien statement was merely evidence of its own existence and that it had been filed in the register of deeds office. Clearly this lien statement did not establish the matters therein stated, and it was incumbent upon anyone who sought to invoke the lien to establish its actual existence by competent evidence. Inasmuch as there was no evidence tending to establish a thresher’s lien, it is unnecessary *538to determine whether defendant conld plead such lien in mitigation of damages. Under any view of the case, the trial court was right in ■directing a verdict, and I fail to find any error requiring a new trial.

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