| Iowa | Apr 24, 1880

Adams, On. J.

i execunotice1 to oíacer‘ The plaintiff averred in his amended petition that at the time the defendant Parker was about to levy upon the wagon, and before the levy was made, he served upon him a written notice of his ownership. The plaintiff then set out in his amended petition a copy of the notice, which purports to be simply a bill of sale to plaintiff from M. F. G. Pitman of the wagon. The defendants demurred upon the ground that the writing relied upon as notice was not such as the law requires.

The plaintiff says in his argument that the amended petition containing the averment of notice was filed in the-action of replevin. He contends that the petition in the other action was sufficient without averment of any notice, and that the court .accordingly erred in sustaining the demurrer.

The cases must have been consolidated upon the theory that if the plaintiff was not entitled to recover in the action *507of replevin lie was not entitled to recover in the other. In our opinion, therefore, the question as to the sufficiency of the notice is material.

The notice of ownership is prescribed by section 3055 of the Code. To be sufficient it must be a notice in writing, from the claimant to the officer, to the effect that the property in question belongs to the claimant. The question presented is as to whether a bill of sale to the claimant can be deemed a notice in writing from the claimant, within the meaning of the statute, where it is delivered to the officer by the claimant with the intention upon his part of giving notice of his ownership. In our opinion it cannot.

It is entirely immaterial as to whether the officer has knowledge of the ownership of the property or not. The object of the written notice as provided by statute is not, therefore, to prove title in the claimant. The giving of written notice by the claimant is a preliminary step taken under the statute to enable the claimant to maintain an action against the officer. The written notice when given becomes in the hands of the officer his justification in demanding a bond for indemnity,-and, in case the bond is not given,-his justification in refusing to levy, or in releasing the levy if he has already made one. The paper designed to constitute such notice should run to the officer and be unequivocal in its character. It should purport upon its face to be precisely what it is intended for, so that when put in evidence with proof of service it should itself be evidence of the claimant’s intention to bring himself within the statute.

We think that the demurrer was rightly sustained.

Affirmed.

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