5 Watts 483 | Pa. | 1836
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The first error assigned raises the question, whether the court ought not to have charged the jury, that, as it appeared from the evidence that the possession of the property did not attend the transfer made of it by Joseph Mayer to the plaintiff, the sale was therefore void in law as against the creditors of Mayer, and that the plaintiff could not recover.
This question was put distinctly to the court by the counsel for the defendants below, who are the plaintiffs here, and an answer was requested to be given in the affirmative to the jury. The defendants were certainly entitled to receive an explicit and definite response; butitdoes not appear to me that any such was given; or if so, it was not such as ought to have been returned by the court. The court rather seems to have answered it hypothetically; as if the state of the evidence left it doubtful whether the possession had been delivered at the time of the sale to the plaintiff or not. The only part of the charge of the court that can be considered as having any relation to this point, is in these words: “ However honest the consideration of the sale was,if the plaintiff did not take possession in pursuance of it, the property was liable to be taken in execution by the creditors. At the time of the levy here, the articles in question were in an apartment, which had been leased to Joseph Mayer; whether he actually resided there or not at the peribd does not appear; or where the plaintiff’s actual abode was. If he, and not she, had the possession of the articles, he ought to be regarded as the owner, and in that case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.” Now if the court below meant to refer to a possession taken by the plaintiff at the time or immediately after the transfer, it was wrong in leaving it to the jury, in such a way as to induce them to believe that they might fairly find from the state of the evidence that the plaintiff had taken the possession then; because the evidence showed most clearly that
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.