132 P. 521 | Or. | 1913
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant’s counsel maintain that, the appeal having been perfected pursuant to the original oral notice, it cannot be abandoned and a new appeal taken. This contention is without merit, however, for as the oral notice was given at the time the motion for a new trial was denied, and not at the time the judgment was given and entered, the notice was ineffectual for any purpose: Sections 201, 550, L. O. L.; Barde v. Wilson, 54 Or. 68 (102 Pac. 301).
The original attempt to review the judgment being ineffectual, it was proper to abandon the experiment and to begin again by the service of a written notice of appeal and the giving of an undertaking thereon.
It follows that the motion should be denied, and it is so ordered. Denied.
Opinion on the Merits
Decided November 11, 1913.
On the Merits.
(136 Pac. 13.)
For appellant there was a brief over the names of Mr. Stephen A. Lowell, Mr. Errett Hieles and Mr. Otis Patterson, with an oral argument by Mr. Lowell.
For respondent there was a brief and an oral argu- . ment by Mr. A. D. Leedy.
This is an action of replevin whereby plaintiff seeks to recover from defendant the possession of two cows claimed to have been taken unlawfully from plaintiff on June 17, 1912. Demand was made upon defendant for their return 12 days later. Defendant, after denying, upon information and belief, plaintiff’s ownership and possession of the property, asserted as a separate defense that prior to the 17th day of June, 1912, defendant obtained the cows by exchange of other property from one Floyd Gilcrest, to whom the property was redelivered on July 2,1912. Plaintiff replied by general denial. The trial of the case resulted in a verdict for defendant.
‘ ‘ The court instructs the jury that if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that defendant obtained possession of these cows from Floyd Gilcrest in a trade for a wagon, but such trade was made subject to the approval of the plaintiff, and if plaintiff refused to accept such trade and demanded possession of these cows from defendant, and defendant refused to deliver them to plaintiff, your verdict should be for plaintiff, and any transfer or surrender of said cows by defendant to the said Gilcrest after said demand and before the commencement of this action, in order to avoid this action, would not avail him anything and the verdict should be for the plaintiff.”
The court did advise the jury at length by saying in substance that a wrongful taking means a taking without right and without lawful authority; that if Gilcrest traded the property in dispute to defendant, when he (Gilcrest) was not the owner thereof, the possession of defendant would be wrongful, even
"We think the court’s counsel was even more favorable to plaintiff than the law contemplates, and that no error was committed in refusing to pass to the jury the instructions requested by the plaintiff. There was no dispute in the testimony that defendant seasonably after the demand made by plaintiff, and prior to the institution of the action, returned the property to Gilcrest, from whom it had been procured.