32 Neb. 792 | Neb. | 1891
George Davis, the plaintiff in error, was the sheriff of Madison county. J. W. Getchell, defendant in error, is a
There was a trial to a jury, with a verdict for the plaintiff, with nominal damages. The cause is brought to this court on error, with six assignments of error.
1. That the court erred in refusing to give the instructions to the jury asked for by defendant.
2. In giving instructions numbered 1 and 2 asked for by plaintiff.
3. In giving instructions numbered 3 and 6 on its own motion.
4. That the court erred in the rejection of evidence pointed out in the bill of exceptions.
5. That the verdict and judgment are contrary to law.
6. The verdict and judgment are contrary to the weight of the evidence.
Upon the trial the plaintiff, being called as a witness in his own behalf, testified to his ownership of the said goods, and that the same were in his possession when seized and levied upon by the defendant; that he resided in Neligh, where he had been engaged in the mercantile trade for the last fourteen years. Upon his cross-examination by defendant he testified that he bought and paid for the said stock of goods; that part of them he bought from Thomas
The defendant called as a witness in his behalf Thomas K. Hansen, who testified that he resides at Burnett; was formerly engaged in the mercantile business there; that he is the Hansen who sold out to Mr. Getchell in July, 1887; remembers the date of the sale; thinks it was on the 7th day of July. To the question how he came to make the sale, and the circumstances with reference to that sale, he answered, “I received a letter from Meyer & Schurman three or four days before I went to Neligh, for me to come down there and take my books along with me to make a settlement. Their man, Mauritius, was there a day or two before and I told him I would not go; I had given him $200, all the money that I had, and he talked about taking a mortgage on a piece of land that I had, but I could not give a mortgage for it was a timber claim; I thought if I could sell out I could pay all my indebtedness.
J. H. Kierstead was sworn and examined as a witness on the part of the defendant. Stated that he resides in. Burnett, Madison county; is in the mercantile business; has been so engaged at Burnett for five years; was acquainted with Mr. Hansen while he was engaged in business there; was not much acquainted with his stock of goods except in the way of appraiser at the time of the levying of the attachment; witness assisted in the appraisement, had not been in the store for four or five weeks before that time; is acquainted with the market value of goods; thinks that the stock of goods was worth in the neighborhood of $1,200 to $1,300; was not very much acquainted with the business of Mr. Hansen at the time of the sale. Counsel for the defendant put the following question to the witness: Q. Were you familiar with his (Hansen’s) personal habits prior to the time of this sale? which question was objected to by the plaintiff, as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, which objection was sustained by the court. Thereupon counsel for the defendant made the following offer: “ Now at this time the defendant offers to prove by the witness now upon the stand that for some months prior to the sale to Getchell by Hansen that Hansen had been very much dissipated, and that it was a matter of general repute in the village of Burnett that his business was in a bad condition financially, and that he was on the verge of failure and bankruptcy;” to which the
The defendant then offered the appraisal of the said goods made at the time of the levy of the attachment, which was received over the objection of the plaintiff and appears in the record. The aggregate value of the goods is not footed up upon the said sheets of appraisal.
J. W. Fetter was sworn and examined on the part of the defendant. Stated that his residence is in Norfolk, that he was a clerk by trade; was acquainted with Thomas K. Hansen ; that he formerly lived in Burnett; that he was clerking there for about a year; clerked there first in 1885; afterwards worked there in 1886 and 1887; knows the time that Mr. Hansen sold out to Mr. Getchell; had been clerking for him about that time; was there on the same day that the sale was made to Mr. Getchell; Mr. Getchell remained there at the store for about a couple of hours; witness did not hear the conversation between them; heard Mr. Hansen say that he wanted $100 more, but did not know the amount or anything about it; was somewhat acquainted with Mr. Hansen’s business at that time; was somewhat familiar with the value of that class of goods; don’t think he exactly knows the value of them; did not invoice them; was acquainted with the value of some of the different classes of goods that were in there; had been handling them during the time that witness was there; cannot tell exactly how much of each kind of goods; as to the value of the entire stock, his estimate is that there is between $800 and $900; witness finally modified his answer to between $800 and $1,200. To the question, “You may state if you know what his business habits were for a. few months before the time of the sale,” plaintiff objected, as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, which objection was sustained by the court.
J.. H. Kierstead being recalled, testified, in answer to
The defendant was also called and examined as a witness on his own behalf. Stated that he was sheriff of the county and by that title held, and none other; claimed to hold the goods attached by virtue of attachments. Witness here identified two orders of attachment which were put in evidence.
Defendant also introduced T. F. Meminger as a witness on his behalf. Testified that he is a resident of Burnett, and is county treasurer of Madison county; in July, 1887, he resided at Burnett, and was cashier of the Bank of Burnett; he was acquainted with Mr. Hansen at that time; that his place of business was in the building west of that occupied by Mr. Hansen; that he was acquainted with Hansen at the time he sold out to Getchell. To the question, “ You may state if you knew of Mr. Hansen’s financial condition about that time,” he answered, “Why, I knew that Hansen was generally hard up all the time; he always claimed that his collections were hard to make; that is about all I know; I think we had somewheres in the neighborhood of $400 to $600 in the bank for collection against him which was due, and which had been presented to him, and he said that he could not pay; that he wanted more time; he never questioned the correctness of the amounts;” that witness saw Mr. Getchell in Burnett the day that he bought the stock; had a conversation with him that day; cannot say exactly, but somewhere in the neighborhood of 5 o’clock in the evening of the same day of the
The plaintiff being recalled and examined as a witness in his own behalf, testified that he thinks he knows the value of the stock of goods in-the Hansen store at the time he purchased it, and that that value was from $400 to $450; that that would be a good price for them. Tp the question, “ What, if anything, induced you to purchase the stock of goods?” he answered, that he wanted to get a building in order to put in a stock of goods there; that there was no other building in town that he could get suitable for it.
While but two of the instructions given by the court on its own motion are excepted to by the defendant, I copy the whole of them:
1. The plaintiff brings this action in replevin to recover from the defendant the stock of goods mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition, which he alleges he was the'owner and entitled to the possession of at the commencement of this action, and that defendant wrongfully detained said property from him, to his damage in the sum of $1,000.
2. The defendant in his answer denies generally the plaintiff’s right to recover.
3. The burden is upon the plaintiff to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that at the commencement of this action, he was the owner and entitled to the possession
4. The charge of fraud in the purchase and sale of the goods in controversy between the plaintiff and T. K. Hansen, it is incumbent upon the defendant to establish by a preponderance of the proof, in order to entitle him to recover therefor.
5. But such fraudulent sale may be proven by showing the existence of other facts and circumstances surrounding or connected with the transaction, tending to show a fraudulent intent on the part of the parties to such sale or conveyance, or tending to show a purpose not consistent with an honest intent; and if you believe from the evidence that the property in controversy was sold by said Hansen to the plaintiff, and if you further believe from the evidence that said Hansen intended by such sale to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors, and that before or at the time plaintiff made such purchase he bad knowledge or notice of the fraudulent purpose of said Hansen, or before or at the time of such purchase the plaintiff had knowledge of such facts and circumstances as would have aroused the suspicious of and put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry, which inquiry, if pursued, would have led to the knowledge or notice of such fraudulent intent on the part of said Hansen, ‘then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.
6. You are instructed that the sale of property in good faith for a valuable consideration, when there is a delivery of the property sold, passes the title to the purchasers, and the fact that the seller was in debt will not of itself invalidate the sale, although the purchaser may have known that fact at the time of purchasing.
7. And you are instructed that, although the sale by Hansen to the plaintiff may have had the effect to hinder
8. In order to render the sale of the goods in controversy to plaintiff from Hansen fraudulent and void, Hansen must have made the conveyance for the purpose and with the intention of defrauding his creditors, and the plaintiff must have purchased with a like intent and purpose, or must have been in possession of facts and circumstances sufficient to put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry, which inquiry, if pursued, would have led to knowledge or notice of such fraudulent intent on the part of said Hansen in the sale of said goods.
9. If you find that at the commencement of this action the plaintiff was the owner of and entitled to the possession of the property in controvery, then you will say so by your verdict and assess him nominal damages of one cent for the wrongful detention of the same.
10. If you should find the issues for the defendant in this case, then the measure of his damages which he will be entitled to recover is the aggregate amount of the attaching creditors’ claims in the case of Meyer & Sc.hurman v. T. K. TIansen, and the case of Turner & Jay v. T. K. Hansen, as mentioned in the several writs of attachment in said cases, introduced in evidence herein, and the sums mentioned therein as costs, however, not to exceed the value of the goods in controversy.
The following instructions were given by the court the request of the plaintiff:
1. You are instructed that fraud is never presumed but must be proved, and that fraud will never be imputed to a transaction where the facts and circumstances upon which it is predicated may exist with honesty and purity of intention; and if you can reconcile the facts (with reference to the sale of the goods from Hansen to the plaintiff), and said facts and circumstances can be reconciled with
2. The burden of proof of fraud in this case is on the defendant, and in order for defendant to establish fraud, he must show a fraudulent intent on the part of Hansen to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors; and that plaintiff herein knew and participated in said fraud, or had knowledge of the facts that would put an ordinary prudent man on inquiry to ascertain said fraudulent intent, and if the evidence in this case fails to show facts and circumstances (or such fraudulent intent) on the part of Hansen, and that the same was participated in by plaintiff, or known to him, then in that case you should find for the plaintiff.
3. The law presumes all transactions honest and made for an honest purpose till the contrary is shown, and the burden of proof to show a dishonest purpose in this case is upon the defendant.
The following instruction asked for by the defendant was refused:
If you find from the evidence that at the time the stock of goods in controversy was sold by Thomas K. Hansen to this plaintiff, that said stock was sold for a sum much less than the real value of the same, such fact, if it be a fact, would be a strong badge of fraud, and the same would be proper for you to consider in making up your verdict.
The first assignment of error is : That the court erred in refusing to give the instructions asked for by defendant.
There is but one instruction copied in the record a.- having been asked for by the defendant, which was refused. Doubtless the ground of such refusal was the use by the draftsman of the word “strong,” as characterizing the fraud or badge of fraud appertaining to the fact, if proved, that the said Thomas K. Hansen sold to the plaintiff the stock of goods in question, for a sum much less than the real value of the same. Reference is made to this instruction as set out at length above, and I am of the opin
The second assignment of error is: That the court erred in giving the third and sixth instructions given by the court on its own motion. This point is not argued by the plaintiff in error in the brief except in connection with the point which we have already considered. From what they there say I do not understand them as objecting to anything which the court says in these instructions, but only to the consideration that it leaves out much which might have been said with propriety.
The third instruction does not purport to give the law of the case, except upon the points therein stated, to-wit: That if the plaintiff has proved by a preponderance of the evidence that at the commencement of the action he was the owner and entitled to the possession of the goods in
The sixth instruction simply states the proposition that the sale of the property was in good faith and for a valuable consideration, when that sale was consummated by a delivery, passes the title to the purchaser, and that the fact that the seller was in debt will not of itself invalidate the sale, although the purchaser may have known that fact at the time of the purchasing. It was not the intention of the court in giving this instruction to shut out and ignore the many facts which often arise, and some of which there was evidence tending to prove had arisen, in this case, which, .if taken in connection with the sale and conditions above stated, would invalidate it, but it was simply its intention to state that, leaving all such considerations out of view, the conditions stated would pass the title of the property to the purchaser.
The brief of plaintiff makes no attack upon the instructions given at the request of the plaintiff, two of which were excepted to by him and made the ground of the third assignment of error. After a somewhat careful examination of the said instructions, I fail to see that they were open to objection.
The fourth assignment of error is in the following words: “ Errors of law occurring during the trial, in the admission and rejection of evidence, which will more fully .appear by reference to the bill of .exceptions herewith filed.” This method of assigning errors is scarcely permissible in a petition in error. It is permissible in a motion for a new trial, solely for the reason that such
J. H. Kierstead being on the stand and testifying on the-part of the defendant, the following question was put to him by counsel for the defendant: Q,. Were you familiar with his (Hansen’s) personal habits prior to the time of this sale? which question was objected to by the plaintiff, as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, which objection was sustained by the court, and thereupon counsel for the defendant made an offer to prove by the witness now upon the stand, that for some months prior to the sale to Getchell by Hansen, Hansen had been very much dissipated, and it was a matter of general repute in the village of Burnett that his business was in a bad condition financially and that he was on the verge of failure and bankruptcy, to which offer the plaintiffs object, as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and not the proper mode of offering to prove a fact, which objection was sustained by the court.
I understand it to be a rule governing offers of evidence that an offer should contain within itself sufficient to show its materiality, to at least some one of the issues or points in controversy in the suit in which it is offered; also, that it should not contain substantive matter which is irrelevant and inapplicable to any of such issues or points in controversy. If I am not in error as to this rule, then-the offer under consideration is inimical to objections in both of such respects. It was certainly not admissible as evi
The fifth and sixth assignments of error are: That the verdict and judgment are contrary to law, and that the verdict is contrary to the weight of evidence.
,1 will assume that counsel in drafting the sixth assignment intended by its language to mean that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. As has often been said in this and other courts, the action of replevin is one in which both parties are actors. While it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove his cause of action and right to the property replevied, it is also incumbent upon the defendent not only to disprove the cause of action of the plaintiff, but to establish his own right to the property and its return to him. It cannot be claimed but that the evidence of the plaintiff established his purchase of the property for value and its possession by him at the time of its seizure by the plaintiff in error, and that he thus established his right to retain the property unless the plaintiff has successfully shown that the said purchase by the plaintiff was made in fraud of the creditors of Hansen. A careful examination of the evidence fails to enable me to point out, or clearly see, any respect in which the conclusion to which the jury arrived in their verdict is clearly wrong. The judgment is therefore
Affirmed.