68 Wis. 563 | Wis. | 1887
The merits of the controversy were involved in the question whether the lumber attached was, at the time, the property of the plaintiffs, or in fact the property of Benjamin Brickley. The verdict rendered necessarily found it to be the property of the plaintiffs. Such verdict is challenged as not being supported by. the evidence. It must be confessed that there are suspicious circumstances connected with the alleged acquisition of title by the plaint
1.- Was the complaint sufficient'? Where there is no demurrer to the complaint, and its sufficiency is first raised by objection to evidence at the trial, it must be liberally construed. So construed, we must hold this complaint sufficient. It alleges the ownership of the; property by the plaintiffs, and its value, the unlawful conversion and disposition of the same by the defendant to his own use and to the damage of the plaintiffs. The title was put in issue and fully tried upon the merits. We cannot disturb the verdict merely by reason of the failure to allege’that the plaintiffs were at the time in possession or entitled to the immediate right to the possession. An allegation of ownership, under such circumstances and after such verdict, must be deemed to include the immediate right to-the possession.
2. The insurance policies on lumber in the yard in 1883 and 1884 seem to have been properly admitted in evidence. Their materiality is not very apparent, it is true, but under the circumstances, and in view of the fact that the husband and father was ostensibly managing the business, we think it was not objectionable to show just how it was treated by them, respectively, during the time. At least it presents no material error.
3. For the same reasons it was competent to show the sources from which the daughter obtained the moneys with which to buy the lands or timber from which some of the lumber in question came. The same was true with reápect to the wife.
4. The court properly excluded the testimony of Segelke, one of the witnesses for the plaintiffs, on cross-examination, as to the contents of the books off the firm at La Crosse in relation to the boarding-house account, and as to whether the boarding-house profits were paid or charged in those books to Benjamin, without showing the knowledge or acquies
5. The same is true in respect to the exclusion of tbe entries in the books of Anthony Ariens, who operated the Runkel mill, respecting a saw-bill against Benjamin and his wife. The same is true respecting the account and books of Segelke, Petty & Co., of a saw-bill of part of the lumber in controversy kept by that firm in the name of Benjamin. There was no evidence tending to show the knowledge of or acquiescence in the making of such entries ■or accounts by either of the plaintiffs, or in any way connecting either of the plaintiffs with the making of either of such entries or accounts, except that the wife did learn that the saw-bill was run in her name for one year and after that in the name of her husband; and that, when the daughter learned that the saw-bill had been kept in the name of her father by Segelke, Petty & Co., she insisted upon having the books altered so that the account should be with her. We do not understand that the defendant was precluded from showing anything he could by legitimate evidence tending to prove an admission on the part of either of the plaintiffs to the effect that Benjamin was the real owner of any of the lumber attached.
6. The mere fact that Benjamin was insolvent at the time did not preclude him from exercising his legal right of paying his wife, in preference to his other creditors, the money which he or his firm had borrowed of her in 1875. There was no law against such preference. If the money was borrowed and repaid in good faith, then there would seem to be no valid reason for depriving her of the benefit of it; and the instructions requested, inconsistent therewith, were properly refused. The jury were, in effect,
7. Exception is taken because the court charged the jury to the effect that the wife anight as legally contract with the firm of Segelke, Kohlhous & Co. as with a stranger for the running of a boarding-house for such firm, notwithstanding her husband was at the time a member of the firm, and .also for refusing to instruct to the contrary. That the wife had no power to so contract, the learned counsel for the defendant cite and rely upon Lord v. Parker, 3 Allen, 127, and Edwards v. Stevens, 3 Allen, 315. Other cases might be cited to the same effect, from the same state and others. But the statutes under which such decisions were made, were in some respects different from ours. The present statutes of Massachusetts seem to prohibit contracts between husband and wife. Secs. 2, 3, 7,11, 'ch. 147, Pub. St. 1882. But in this state it was settled, even prior to the enactment of ch. 155, Laws of 1872 (secs. 2343, 2345, B. S.), that a married woman, having a separate estate, might deal with her husband respecting the same, loan him money, take a transfer of property from him in payment thereof, and buy property of him, provided the transaction was fair and honest and not in fraud of creditors. Beard v. Dedolph, 29 Wis. 136; Hoxie v. Price, 31 Wis. 82; Breslauer v. Geilfuss, 65 Wis. 387. The powers thus possessed by married women are greatly enlarged by the enactment mentioned. Krouskop v. Shontz, 51 Wis. 215, 216; Houghton v. Milburn, 54 Wis. 554; Carney v. Gleissner, 62 Wis. 497. But the objection is more specific, and goes to the nature of the contract. The conti’act for boarding the men did not have direct reference to the wife’s separate estate. But, if she had a separate estate at the time, she could, under the law as'settled in this state, contract even with her husband upon the faith and credit of that estate. Besides,' the statute
8. Exceptions are taken because the court refused to give certain instructions requested, and charged the jury to the contrary, and to the effect that the logs out of which the lumber in controversy was manufactured were from lands of which the plaintiffs, or one of them, had the legal title, and that the legal title of such logs and lumber would follow and be in the legal owners of the land ; that a married woman might lawfully purchase property, real or personal, and carry on business in her own name, and have, own, and enjoy the fruits thereof, the same as though she were unmarried, without interference from her husband or his creditors, but only upon the condition that the money or capital so employed be her own, and not her husband’s, and obtained from sources other than and independent of her husband; that she could not take her husband’s money and purchase property in her own name to screen it from the lawful demands of her husband’s creditors, nor carry on his business in her name in order to prevent such creditors from reaching its products; that property thus purchased.
9. Exception is taken because the court charged the jury, in effect, that the burden of proving the alleged fraud was upon the defendant. Even where the wife claims title to property seized on execution against her husband by virtue of a conveyance/rom him to her, the burden of proof is upon her only to show that she purchased the property for a valuable and adequate consideration paid out of her separate estate, or by some other person for her. That being shown, the burden of proving such conveyance to have been made in fraud of the husband’s creditors is upon the party attacking the same. Evans v. Rugee, 57 Wis. 623. This is con
10. Exception is taken because the court, in effect, charged the jury that if the property attached was the plaintiffs’ then the action of the defendant in taking, making, and thus assuming and retaining control over it, was a sufficient conversion to maintain this action. The fact that the answer justified the seizure, possession, and holding of the property by the defendant under the attachment against the husband and father, would seem to preclude the defendant from now disclaiming such seizure, possession, and holding. ,
. 11. The court was requested to instruct the jury, in effect, that if they believed “ from the whole testimony that the money was, in whole or in part, derived from her husband or from the proceeds of her husband’s estate, and that such title was so taken in her name to aid or assist in covering up her husband’s property and to hinder, delay, or defraud her husband’s creditors, then the plaintiffs ” .could not recover, and their verdict should be for the defendant. This was substantially given, whether it had respect to the whole or only a part.
12. The mere fact that Augusta and her husband had, March. 21, 1885, given a chattel mortgage upon the lumber, or some of it, to Einch, to indemnify him and Cate against
13. The mere refusal to state certain facts to the jury, though undisputed, is not ground for reversal.
14. Error is assigned because the court refused to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial for newly discovered evidence. This evidence is said to be the existence of a common-law lien in favor of Segelke, Petty & Co. for sawing a portion of the lumber attached. But that question was not involved in the issues in this case, as will appear from their nature as already stated. Not being in issue, the existence of such common-law lien could not have been authoritatively determined upon a retrial of such issues. Wilde v. Paschen, 67 Wis. 90; Carney v. Gleissner, 62 Wis. 493. Undoubtedly, such third persons might have been made parties, and the question as to the existence of such lien might then have been determined. Ibid.; sec. 2610, B. S.; ch. 41, Laws of 1883. Had they been made parties, a new and different issue would have been presented for trial. But the trial of such new issue would not have necessitated a retrial of the old issues, although its determination might have diminished the amount of the plaintiffs’
We have thus disposed of all the questions presented by the record. Although numerous errors were assigned and vigorously presented, yet a careful examination of each by all the four members of the court participating in the decision fails to disclose any substantial error on the part of the trial court.
By the Court.— The judgment.of the circuit court is affirmed.