92 Cal. 497 | Cal. | 1891
This is an appeal by defendant from an order of the court below setting aside a verdict and
The action was to recover certain hay on a farm that had been leased by Stewart, the owner of the farm,, to Chubbuck & Son. The defendant, McHugh, who was’ a constable, claimed to have taken the hay by virtue of a writ of attachment against said Chubbuck at the suit of one McHarry. Stewart had assigned the lease and all rights which he had under it to the plaintiff, Blum. The lease provided that “ the title to and right of possession of all crops ” on the farm “ shall be in ” the lessor, Stewart, until the rent shall be paid. The whole amount of rent which Chubbuck was to pay was $950; and it seems from the evidence — stated in the opinion of the court when granting the new trial — that when this action was commenced the rent had all been paid except about $100, and that Blum had in his possession, in his warehouse, forty tons of the hay raised on the farm which Chubbuck had .delivered to him. This forty tons would have been more than sufficient to pay the balance of the rent due.
The court seemed to lay some stress on the fact that the defendant (the constable) did not prove that he had a valid writ of attachment under which he acted. But in this case that matter was immaterial. If plaintiff owned the hay still on the farm, the defendant could not have legally taken it as the property of Chubbuck under any writ of attachment, however valid; and if the plaintiff did not own it, then he could not have reclaimed it, although the constable was a mere trespasser.
Whether or not plaintiff owned the hay still remaining on the land, or had any lien on it, depended upon the question whether or not the rent had all been satisfied. Plaintiff had another account against Chubbuck, in addition to the rent; and it seems that he (or the firm
The order granting a new trial is affirmed.
De Haven, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.