32 P. 252 | Idaho | 1893
This is an action brought by the plaintiffs to recover from the defendant the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) damages, alleged to have been suffered by plaintiffs
Defendant denies ownership or possession in plaintiffs, and alleges that the plaintiff, Hannah C. Ferbrache, claimed title to said mules by virtue of a pretended bill of sale executed by
The case was tried by a jury, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for three hundred dollars. A motion for a new trial was made, upon a statement of the case, which was denied, and the defendant appeals both from the judgment, and the order overruling the motion for a new trial.
The plaintiffs introduced a bill of sale, executed on the 23d of June, 1890. The bill of sale was admitted in evidence over the objection of the defendant, which is assigned for error. Section 19 of the Laws of Idaho, 15th Session, page 49, provides: “That it shall be unlawful for any person in this territory to sell any head of livestock without giving a written bill of sale therefor, and it shall be unlawful for any person in this territory to purchase any head of livestock without receiving a bill of sale therefor; such bill of sale shall contain a full description of the marks and brands or either on said livestock, and must be witnessed by two reputable citizens of the territory, and acknowledged before a notary public, or other officer authorized to use a seal, and must be recorded in the office of the county recorder in the same manner that deeds are recorded.” This act was approved February 7, 1889, and was repealed March 3, 1891, and was therefore in force at the time of the execution of this bill of sale.
The bill of sale does not comply with the requirements of this act in any respect, except that it was in the ordinary form, and was witnessed by two citizens. It was not, however, acknowledged before a notary public or any other officer authorized to take acknowledgments, nor was it recorded in the office of the county recorder in the manner required by this act. It was therefore not admissible as evidence tending to prove the sale was transfer of this property, and to admit it for such purpose was error.
It appears from the evidence that one of the teams claimed to have been sold to Hannah C. Ferbrache by Ferbrache Brothers was afterward sold to one Jacobs by R. L. Ferbrache, .a member of the firm of Ferbrache Brothers, by whom it was taken out of the state/ Hannah C. Ferbrache, to whom these 'teams were claimed to be sold, was the mother of the boys who ■comprised the firm of Ferbrache Brothers. This evidence was .rejected on the ground that the conversations that were proposed to be proven were not had in the presence of the plaintiff. The acts or declarations of a party to a fraud are admissible, though he is not a party to the suit, and though not made in the presence of the party claiming to be the purchaser of the property.
George W. Jacobs, being examined on the part of the defend■ant, testifies as follows: “About the Fourth of July, 1890, R. L. Ferbrache was down here and he was in my place of business, and was telling me something about him having some teams up there. I don’t know whether he told me, or whether I broached the subject to him. I am inclined to think 1 broached the subject to him. In the first place, I asked him if he knew he was going to be closed out; that I understood
The testimony shows that E. L. Ferbrache and one other of the boys composing the firm were bargaining with Jacobs to sell him the teams that they claimed! to have sold to their mother; that they did sell him one of them, in the night-time, and he took them out of the state; that it was done for the purpose of preventing Stone or Poirier from taking them under attachment. It appears also that 'this conversation between Jacobs and E. L. Ferbrache as to selling these teams to Jacobs was at plaintiff’s house, and one team was sold and delivered to Jacobs without consulting plaintiffs, or either of them, only a few days after the bills of sale were made to the plaintiff. Under the circumstances the questions put to E. L. Ferbrache
The fourth error assigned was the striking out all the evidence of Jacobs above quoted. It appears from this evidence that the firm of Ferbrache Brothers- was then insolvent, and this whole transaction with Jacobs was had for the sole purpose of defrauding their creditors, and it has a strong tendency, to prove that the sale of both teams to the mother of the boys was a sham, and made to cover up this property. The mother testifies that she did not see Jacobs at all, did not know him, and first claimed that the Poirier team had not been transfercd to her; that when she learned it had been transferred to Jacobs she did not object to it, but, as an excuse, said that the Poirier team was not of much value; she also admitted afterward that she knew of the sale to Jacobs.
The testimony of Jacobs was proper evidence under the circumstances, and to strike it out was error. (8 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 778; Hart v. Newton, 12 N. W. 508, 48 Mich. 401.) “Where the question in issue is as to the good faith of an alleged purchase of a stock of goods, much latitude of inquiry should he permitted as to the conduct of the parties or circumstances of the transaction and the consideration of the purchase, and as to the means of the vendee.” (Douglass v. Hill, 29 Kan. 527; Kalk v. Fielding, 50 Wis. 339, 7 N. W. 296.) “Evidence of similar transactions showing fraud occurring about the same time, or as a part of the same scheme, is usually admissible.” (Day v. Stone, 59 Tex. 612; Heath v. Page, 65 Pa. St. 108, 3 Am. Rep. 533; Adams v. Kinney, 59 N. H. 133.)
In attacking the good faith of the sale or conveyance of property it is also competent to show that the vendor or grantor was in embarrassed circumstances when the sale or conveyance was made. (Geisendorf v. Eagles, 106 Ind. 38, 5 N. E. 743.) Even common report of insolvency is admissible. (Gordon v. Ritenour, 87 Mo. 54.) In cases of fraud subsequent acts are frequently resorted to for the purpose of showing antecedent fraud. The dealing with property to-day by the vendor as his property is evidence to show a fraud committed in the sale of a
Instructions Nos. 1 and 2, requested by the plaintiff, and 3 and 4 given at the request of the defendant, are proper. Instructions 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6, requested by the defendant, are too long, and contain conditions that could not be approved by the court; for instance, No. 2 contains these conditions: “If the plaintiff did not .at all times after the pretended sale of said mules, have exclusive possession and control of said mules, then the title of the plaintiff is void/'’ This is not the law, and it was properly refused. It is not necessary that the purchaser of property shall at all times have exclusive possession of it. He may hire it out to others, or even to the same party from whom he purchased it, and where the purchase is in good faith it will not defeat his title. All the circumstances must be taken into -consideration where the evidence of fraud is not positive and direct.
Instruction No. 4, requested by the defendant during the argument, was the law, and should have been given. These latter instructions seem' to have been submitted to the court, at or about the time of the close of the argument in the ease. They are long and contain intricate clauses, and, as we have said, some of them contain provisions that are not the law.
The attorney has the time to prepare the instructions before the trial closes, and frequently before it begins. They should consist of clear, concise and brief statements of provisions of law, applicable to the evidence, and should be presented to the court at the beginning of the argument, if practicable, and not at its close, so that the court may have time to carefully consider them. If this practice should be followed by the bar, it is believed that members of the bar would have less reason to complain of the court, and the instructions would be. much better. These remarks are not made because specially applicable to this case, but as applicable to all eases.
The judgment in this ease is reversed, and a new trial ordered; costs awarded to appellant.