101 Wis. 423 | Wis. | 1898

Maeshall, J.

It does not appear to be contended that the-pickle-works business and stock belonged to M. E. Erei, but that he was held out as owner by plaintiff, and upon the faith of such holding out Below instituted the garnishee suit, and prosecuted it to judgment, and that plaintiff was precluded by her conduct from changing her position and recovering on the truth as to the ownership of the pickle business. It is not claimed that Below lost any right or was prejudiced- in any way'by the pretense on the part of plaintiff that her husband owned the property, except that the garnishee action was commenced and costs incurred therein. That was evidence against plaintiff’s claim of title, not conclusive, however, so as to estop her from proving the truth and recovering in accordance therewith. Mere representations as to title or indebtedness, on the faith of which an action is commenced and prosecuted to judgment, do not work an estoppel inypcds. Warder v. Baker, 54 Wis. 49. That is an exception to the salutary rule, of quite general application, that if a person takes a position for the purpose of inducing another to act in a particular way, or with knowledge;, or reasonable means of knowledge, that he will thereby be *426induced to so act, to his injury if such position be changed, and such other does so act, such person is bound by the appearances which induced such action without regard to whether they represented the truth or not. So here, looking at the case in the most favorable light for the appellant which, the evidence will bear, the plaintiff was not estopped by her conduct from recovering on the true state of the title to the pickle-works stock. The reaction of plaintiff was not sufficiently injurious to Fisher to give to her previous conduct the conclusive effect of estoppel.

True, as indicated, representations made by plaintiff, or with her knowledge in her presence, and appearances for which she was responsible, inconsistent with her claim of title, were evidence bearing on the question at issue, but, though the assignment of errors is broad enough to cover the subject, it is clear that it was neither claimed in the court below, nor is it claimed here by the learned counsel for appellant, that the circuit court should have left it to the jury to draw the proper inferences as to the title of the property in controversy from such evidence. The claim below and here is that Below acted on the faith of the representations and appearances and was misled thereby and is therefore entitled to protection by the law of estoppel in pcds. On this, as we have seen, the court below decided rightly, .and that renders it unnecessary to consider the ruling excepted to, as to the insufficiency of the plea of estoppel, and some rulings excluding evidence bearing on the subject.

It is contended by the learned counsel for appellant that the evidence shows the transfer to plaintiff was a mere gift and void as to creditors, and further that the evidence tended to show that the whole proceeding of placing the property in plaintiff’s name was fraudulent not only as to existing, but subsequent, creditors, and that the case should have gone to the jury on that question. The conclusive answer to that is, that Below was not a creditor Avho parted with property or *427anything of value, except costs as before said, on the faith of a belief as to JVL E. Erei’s ownership of the pickle business, so was in no position to impeach plaintiff’s title on the ground of fraud any more than on the ground of estoppel. The parties to the cause were so circumstanced that the sole ■question was, ‘Who in fact was the owner of the pickle business, plaintiff or her husband? As no claim was made in the court below that the case should have been submitted to the jury to find on the evidence on that question, and the rulings of the trial court were right on the questions calling for a decision by the attitude of counsel, there is no reversible error in the record.

By the Gowrt. — -The judgment is affirmed.

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