75 Ind. 356 | Ind. | 1881
In this action the appellee sued the appellant to recover the possession of five mules, the description and value of each of which were stated in the complaint. The appellee alleged that he was the owner and entitled to the possession of the five mules, which the appellant, on the 4th day of December, 1878, unlawfully and wrongfully took into his possession and converted to his own use, and still retained and held possession of, to appellee’s damage in the sum of one thousand dollars. The suit was commenced oh December 5th, 1878, and afterward, on December 17th, 1878, the appellee filed the affidavit required by law, and thereon obtained an order for the delivery of the possession of the mules to him. The cause having been put at issue and tried by a jury, a verdict was returned finding the mules to be of the value of $275, and the property of the appellee, and finding for the appellee and assessing his damages at $5.50. The appellant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, and his exception saved to this decision, the court rendered judgment on the verdict.
The appellant has here assigned as errors the following decisions of the circuit court:
1. In overruling his motion for a new trial;
2. In overruling his motion to quash the affidavit in replevin.
We find it necessary to a proper understanding of the questions presented for our decision, that we should first give a statement of the. facts of this case, as shown by the record: On the 18th day of May, 1877, one Edmund Ma-honey, of Hendricks county, executed a chattel mortgage to the appellee, Hawn, on the mules in controversy in this action, and divers other articles of personal property, to secure the payment of certain notes, described in said mortgage executed by said Mahoney to the appellee, It was stipulated in said mortgage, among other things, that if Mahoney made default in the mortgage debt, when it became
In November, 1878, and until the commencement of this suit, the appellant, Emmons, was the sheriff of Hendricks county. On the 7th day of November, 1878, there came to the hands of the appellant, as such sheriff, an execution of that date, issued out of the court below on a judgment therein rendered, on the 10th day of June, 1876, in favor of Christian’ C. and Christian A. Nave, and against the said Edmund Mahoney, for the sum of $193 and the costs of suit. When the appellant demanded property of said Mahoney, under said execution, he was informed by said Mahoney that he, Mahoney, did not own any property. The mules in controversy in this suit were then on the farm on which Mahoney lived, but the latter told the appellant that these mules were the property of the appellee, Hawn. Afterward* on the 4th day of December, 1878, by the direction of the. execution plaintiffs, the appellant, as such sheriff, levied said execution upon the said mules as the property of said Mahoney, and kept them until a writ was issued in this suit therefor, when he delivered them to the appellee, Hawn.
But the facts of this case, as shown by the evidence, do not sustain the appellant’s theory of the case. These facts' show that the appellee was, and had been for nearly a year before the commencement of this suit, the absolute owner
Our conclusion is, that the trial court committed no error in overruling the appellant’s motion for a new trial.
Upon the second error assigned, namely, the overruling of the motion to quash the affidavit in- replevin, all that is said by the appellant’s counsel, in his elaborate brief of this cause, is this: “The affidavit in replevin, filed in said cause, is clearly bad.” Wherein the affidavit is bad, the learned counsel has failed to inform us, and we confess our inability to find any defect therein, if any exists. It seems to us to be in strict compliance with the requirements of the code. The motion to quash the affidavit was correctly overruled. We find no error in the record.
The judgment is affirmed, at the appellant’s costs.