15 S.D. 454 | S.D. | 1902
The plaintiff seeks to recover upon a certificate of deposit for $695, issued by the defendant. Defendant denies that plaintiff owns the certificate, and the intervener claimes that he is the owner of it. Whether the certificate is owned by the plaintiff or the intervener is the only controversy.
Upon the trial the jury returned the following verdict: “We,
The contention that the intervener is a mere interloper and that his complaint in intervention should have been dismissed is untenable. The law of this case was otherwise determined on a former appeal. For the same reason it cannot now be contended
There is no merit in the contention that the intervener is es-topped to deny the plaintiff’s title by reason of having been present when the certificate was delivered to the plaintiff without making any objection to the transfer. How can the doctrine of estoppel in pais be invoked for the protection of one who- acts in bad faith ? The foundation of such an estoppel is the honest and reasonable belief
Finding the record free from reversible error, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.