The defendant complains that the court erred in answering,,the first question submitted to the jury.
A careful review of the evidence convinces us that there was sufficient evidence which, if believed by the jury, would have sustained a finding, at least as to the Logan line. The motion to direct a verdict having been made after the verdict had been received, at least to the extent of reading that part of it relating to damages, we think there was no waiver of the right to a jury trial, and that therefore the court erred in answering question No. 1 as it did.
“Sec. 2728. Stats. The sheriff shall file the notice, affidavit and undertaking given by the plaintiff, with proof of service thereof, with the clerk of the court in which the action is pending, within twenty days after taking the property mentioned therein.”
Defendant argues that the action should have been dismissed by reason of the failure of the sheriff to file the papers within the time limited. The failure of the sheriff to file the papers within the time required by sec. 2728 does not operate to divest the court of jurisdiction, which is the
In the replevin proceedings the plaintiff described his property as one pile of bark south of depot, six piles of pulp wood west of track, south of depot, two piles of logs north of mill, two piles of logs northeast of mill, all in the village of Chelsea, in said county. As before stated, it appeared upon the trial that of the property so seized by the sheriff and delivered to the plaintiff a part belonged to the plaintiff and a part to the defendant. Assuming that the property was wrongfully commingled by the defendant, he was, under the facts in this case, nevertheless entitled to a return of the property remaining after the claim of the plaintiff was satisfied, and if the property had been disposed of by the plaintiff and return thereof was impossible, the defendant claims that he is entitled to judgment for the value of the property so taken, return of which cannot be made. The judgment was:
“That the plaintiff, Edward Behling, do have and recover the possession of the property hereinbefore described as taken from plaintiff’s land by the defendant of the value of $181.53, as hereinbefore found, and the balance of the value of $194.17, as heretofore found, is due the defendant from the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff recover six cents damages and $107.19 costs.”
The defendant contends that under the doctrine laid down in Lanyon v. Woodward, 65 Wis. 543, 27 N. W. 337, he is entitled to judgment for the excess. The plaintiff contends that under St. Paul B. Co. v. Kemp, 125 Wis. 138, 103 N. W. 259, the defendant having intermingled the plaintiff’s prope'rty with his own, the defendant is entitled to have what the judgment gives him, a return of the property, or
“Respondent [plaintiff in replevin] was entitled to the logs seized, and to its full proportion out of the entire quantity of lumber seized, namely, 6,000 feet, and the costs of the action; and appellant was entitled to a return of the excess of the lumber so seized, or, if the lumber could not be returned, to its value, without any damages for the seizure of such excess under the writ of-replevin.”
Sec. 2888.provides:
“If the property have been delivered to the plaintiff and a defendant claim a return thereof judgment for the defendant may be for a return of the property or the value thereof, in case a return cannot be had, and damages for taking, and withholding the same.”
The return of the excess of' the lumber so seized, referred to in St. Paul B. Co. v. Kemp, refers to the return to which the defendant is entitled under the provisions of sec. 2888. The defendant was therefore entitled, it appearing that the property could not be returned, to a judgment for its value, without damages. The matter of costs must be disposed of in accordance with the ruling in Lanyon v. Woodward, supra. See, also, Freed F. & C. Co. v. Sorensen, 28 Utah, 419, 79 Pac. 564, 107 Am. St. Rep. 731.
The parties having stipulated upon the trial that one of the three lines mentioned was the true line and the jury having found the danlages with reference to each of these lines, no useful purpose would be served by a retrial of the question of damages unless the parties should, in the exercise of the court’s discretion, be relieved óf the stipulation entered into relating jo the lines, in which'event, of course, the matter of damages would again be thrown open to in
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial according.to this opinion.