147 Iowa 390 | Iowa | 1910
The petition in replevin was filed September 11, 1908, and the writ issued on the same day. At that time, according to the amendment to the petition, and for ten or twelve hours thereafter, the two span of mules in controversy were in Linn County, and the defendant Emerson Walmer was a resident thereof. The venue then was rightly laid, even though defendant Boone was a resident of Johnson County, for section -4163 of the Code provides that such an action may be brought “in any county in which the property or some part thereof is situated.”
And this conclusion is not obviated by the circumstance that one team of mules had been taken a few rods across the line between Linn and Cedar Counties after
Four days subsequent to the filing of the petition, Walmer filed a motion to quash the writ. In so doing he assailed the writ because of the alleged insufficiency of the petition. The sole issue was the right of possession, and the motion directly assailed the plaintiff’s claim thereto. Manifestly, then, the appearance was for a “purpose connected with the cause,” and rendered the' service of an original notice on Walmer unnecessary. Section 3541, Code.
That petition, as amended, contained all the requirements of section 4163 of the Code, and alleged, in substance, that the property was obtained from plaintiff through conspiracy and fraud practiced on him by the three defendants; Boone first obtaining possession of the property and afterwards transferring the same to the Walmers in the perpetration of their fraudulent enterprise. It also alleged a rescission of the oral arrangement under which possession was obtained and a demand on Emerson Walmer and William Boone for the property. The rescission was because of the fraud alleged to have been practiced as well as of the defendant’s inability to
As our conclusion is otherwise, the ruling on both motions are reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent -with this opinion. — Reverséd.