8 S.D. 304 | S.D. | 1896
Claiming to be the owner of certain household effects, including a piano, mentioned in the complaint, and alleged to have been wrongfully taken and detained by the defendant, plaintiff brings this action, in claim and delivery, to recover the immediate possession thereof.. Under the answer
The trial resulted in a verdict upon all the issues against the defendant, in plaintiff’s favor, and the defendant appeals from a judgment entered thereon, and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial. As the above ruling will require a trial, and in view of the disposition of courts to allow amendments in the interest of justice, an assignment of error relating to a ruling upon what appears to be a valid objection to the introduction of any evidence under the complaint will receive no attention. While it is well settled, in replevin at common law, that an officer, in order to justify the seizure of property claimed by or found in the possession of a stranger to the writ, must plead the specific facts upon which he bases his special property or right to possession, he may, according to the code system, under a general denial, show that his possession of the property is rightful, by virtue of legal process under which the same was seized, or he may show that the same was not wrongfully detained, by proving title in himself or in a stranger. Agricultural Works v. Young, (S. D.) 62 N. W. 432; Schulenberg v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 44. In Missouri it was held that ‘ ‘where, in such a proceeding, defendant makes a general denial of title in plaintiff, he may justify under legal process against the rightful owner.” Bosse v. Thomas, 3 Mo. App. 472. “In an action in replevin the defendant may show, under the gfiner.al issue, that the goods in controversy are the prop