Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The respondent bank, plaintiff below, recovered a judgment against appellant as surety upon the official bond of the sheriff of Rosebud county for the sum of $1,557.43, upon a cause of action growing out of the following state of facts:
In November, 1913, one E. S. Haskell commenced an action against the firm of Woolston & Holland, a copartnership conducting a garage and automobile business in the town of Forsyth in said county, to recover a balance of about $5,000 alleged to be due him from said firm, for goods sold and delivered to them. On the same day a writ of attachment was issued out of the district court of that county and by the sheriff thereof levied on property supposed to belong to the firm. The respondent bank filed and served upon the sheriff a third-party claim for the property so attached. On November 25 the plaintiff in the attachment suit delivered to the then sheriff (William E. Moses) a bond securing the sheriff in the retention of the attached property. In the following January the sheriff was killed and John Yan der Pauwert, who had theretofore during the incumbency of said Moses served as undersheriff, was on February 4 appointed and duly qualified as the successor of Moses. On June 30, and while the suit in attachment was still pending, the respondent bank commenced an' action in'claim and delivery against Yan der Pauwert alone. Failing to appear, in due course a default was taken against him, and a judgment rendered and entered determining that the possession and ownership of the property was in the respondent bank at the time of the levy of the attachment upon the property in question, and that defendant therein was in possession thereof and wrongfully withholding the same from the plaintiff. The judgment also
It appears in evidence that the defendant Van der Pauwert was acting as undersheriffi for Moses during the time of the occurrences in question; that he had full knowledge of the business both before and after his assumption of the office of sheriff; that he was conversant with the transaction attending the seizure of the property under attachment proceedings at the suit of E. S. Haskell v. Woolston et al.; that while undersheriff he subjected some of the articles under attachment to his own personal use, and, as sheriff, took actual possession of it all, retained it during the pendency of all the proceedings now before us, and never did deliver the property to the plaintiff in response to its demand upon him.
At the close of all the testimony both the plaintiff and defendant moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor upon the ground that in the then state of the evidence there was no substantial issue of fact touching the immediate delivery followed by an actual and continued change of possession of
The pleadings put in issue the possession and ownership of the property at the time of the attachment. If that issue is to stand determined in favor of plaintiff, the other questions
"Where the evidence is conflicting, the judgment of the lower
Whether Woolston & Holland had in good faith sold the property before its sequestration by attachment and accompanied the sale by an immediate delivery and continued change of possession, was the vital question before the court. This fact the district court determined in favor of the plaintiff. After a careful review of all the testimony, we are not prepared to differ with that court in its conclusion that the testimony was sufficient to establish that- fact. “As between the parties to a Sale of personal property, it is wholly immaterial whether there is 'any delivery of the thing sold. It is equally true that a mere creditor, as such, does not have any interest whatever in his debtor’s property.. If the Shaekleton & Whiteway Construction Company had in good faith sold all this property to Farnham and others on June 26, and had accompanied the sale by an. immediate delivery, Parr could not complain, even though such sale might operate to defeat him in the collection of his debt.” (Western Min. Supply Co. v. Quinn, 40 Mont. 156, 135 Am. St. Rep. 612, 20 Ann. Gas. 173, 28 L. R. A. (n. s.) 214, 105 Pac. 732.)
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result only.
I do not concur in the result reached in the majority opinion. -Section 6128 of the Revised Codes declares that every transfer of personal property, such as the one in question here, “is conclusively presumed, if made by a person having at the time the possession or control of the property, and not accompanied by an immediate delivery, and followed by an actual and continued