140 Mo. App. 715 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This is an action of replevin for two horses. At the close of the evidence given by plaintiff in his own behalf, the trial court gave a peremptory instruction that the jury should find for defendant.
It further appeared from plaintiff’s testimony that he authorized the nephew to sell the team for one hundred and forty dollars net to plaintiff, the nephew to have all over that sum he could get.
After the nephew had thus used the horses for more than three years, he sold them to Helferstine & Pratt, and they afterwards sold them to this defendant. When plaintiff heard of the sale to Helferstine & Pratt he notified them of his claim of title, but at that time they had sold to defendant.
In our opinion the foregoing left plaintiff without any legal standing and the court could do no less than direct a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff relies upon section 3401, Revised Statutes 1899, which provides that if a loan of personal property is made and possession left with the bailee for more than five years, the property shall be considered to be the bailee’s as to his creditors and purchasers. The claim is made that as the nephew had not been in possession five years, plaintiff’s title stood unimpaired. But we think the evidence
Plaintiff loaned the horses to his nephew and though be became aware that the nephew repudiated the bailment and claimed them as his own and conveyed them to others, he still left them in his possession; and more than that, he had authority to sell them, provided he got a certain price net to the plaintiff.
We do not see how the case is to be distinguished from McDermott v. Barnum, 19 Mo. 204. The syllabus in that case recites that “If A. leaves his personal property in the possession of B. and with knowledge that he is holding himself out to the world as the owner of it, stands by and permits this conduct, he will be estopped from afterwards claiming the property as his own against parties who have trusted B. upon the faith of it.” In this case plaintiff says he protested against his nephew’s conduct and notified the parties to whom he had traded and mortgaged the property. But that was useless, when he at each time permitted him to keep them. When he learned that the nephew had repudiated the bailment and that he laid claim of ownership by actually disposing of the property, it became his duty to the public, thus liable to be deceived, to protect them against such such acts, and failing in this, he should be estopped, when at last the party he thus trusted with apparent ownership succeeds in selling the property to purchasers with no knowledge of his title.
In McNeil v. Bank, 46 N. Y. 825, it is held that where the owner of property confers upon another an apparent title or power of disposition over it, he is es-topped from asserting his title as against an innocent third party who has dealt with the apparent owner in reference thereto, without knowledge of the claim of the owner.
In Camp v. Railway Co., 62 Mo. App. 85, the St. Louis Court of Appeals said , that: “The principle is
The ruling of the trial court was manifestly right and the judgment is affirmed.