6 S.D. 269 | S.D. | 1894
This case now before us on rehearing is reported in 4 S. D. 441, 57 N. W. 339, and was instituted in the court below to recover from an attaching officer and his deputy the possession or value of a certain stock of' hardware kept for the purpose of retail trade in the village of Dell Rapids, of which the plaintiff claims to be the owner and entitled to the immediate possession; and the value of said stock of merchandise is alleged to be $4,000. The action is in claim and delivery, acd the complaint contains the usual averments. To justify the siezure of the property, and as a defense to the alleged cause of actioD, the defendants, a sheriff and his deputy, rely upon certain attachment proceedings at the suit of one Haish against Sibbison, set up in their answer, alleging a fraudulent sale from Sibbison to Griswold; and the evidence offered in support of the issues thus tendered is, so far as necessary to be considered, substantially as follows: On the 9th day of April, 1891, Sibbison, who was indebted to Haish in the sum of $1,700, owned the stock of merchandise in controversy, and was then, and for a number of years had been, engaged in the retail hardware business in Dell Rapids, occupying for that purpose a storeroom or building of which he appeared to be the owner; and the evidence, at least prima facie, shows that the plaintiff, Griswold, on the above-mentioned date, purchased from Sibbison said stock of hardware, and assumed immediate control of the business, and remained in constant and actual possession of the entire stock until the 20th of the same month,- when the attachment was levied thereon as the property of Sibbison, and the same was taken by the defendant sheriffs deputy into cus
It has been noticed that plaintiff bases his right to immediate possession upon a claim of ownership, and in his complaint describes the property wrongfully detained as goods, wares, and merchandise situated in his store in Dell Rapids, which was formerly owned by W. J. Sibbison; and he alleges the value of the property to be $4,000, and avers that the same is more particularly described in his affidavit in claim and delivery; and it becomes necessary, therefore,' to examine the schedule of property thereto attached, the return of the coroner, the undertaking in claim and delivery, and the redelivery bond of the defendants, as it is claimed by counsel for appellant that there is no evidence identifying the property attached and taken into defendant’s possession as being the property claimed by plaintiff and described in'his affidavit and complaint, and that the court erred in holding, as. a matter of law, that plaintiff had so far established a case 'that the only question to be submitted to the jury was the measure of damages and the value of the property. While the plaintiff, in his complaint, describes the property in dispute as goods, wares, and merchandise of the value of $4,000, belonging to him and situated in his store in Dell Rapids, formerly owned by W. J. «Sibbison, he states that the affidavit herein contains a more particular description-of said property; and we find from an inspection thereof, and the undisputed evidence before us, that the schedule of property attached to said affidavit in claim and delivery, and claimed by the plaintiff, contains numerous items that were neither purchased by the plaintiff from, not attached by the defendants as the property of, Sibbison, and that said schedule consists of an inventory of the stock of hardware in dispute, taken about three months before plaintiff purchased, and defendants attached, the same, and that- intermediately sales had been made by Sibbison in the usual course of retail trade, with
It is evident from the return of the coroner and from the recitals of defendant’s redelivery bond, as well as from the undisputed testimony of the witnesses, that defendants never had in their possession all the property enumerated in the schedule attached to the affidavit in claim and delivery. The coroner returned* that he took possession of so much thereof as was at that time contained in a certain store building in the village of Dell Rapids, formerly occupied by A. W. Griswold as a hardware store”; and the redelivery bond designated the property as being a certain £>ortion of the property specified in the affidavit and undertaking in claim and delivery, and as shown by the inventory of the coroner. Numerous witnesses testified at the trial concerning the value of the property, and each based his estimate upon the stock in the store actually taken by defendants, and exclusive of articles enumerated in the schedule attached to plaintiff’s affidavit, which were not so taken and turned over to the attorney for the attaching.creditor. Gris-wold and Sibbison testified that the property was worth $3,860,
On the part of the defense, O. W. Hooker testified that the property in dispute was worth about $1,500 on the day plaintiff claims to have bought the same from Sibbison. T. P. Leavitt testified, in effect that it was worth from $1,600 to $1,800 at that time, and at all subsequent times while in the possession of the defendants. The complaint alleges the value of the property to be $4,000, the answer admits it is worth $2,000, and, from a consideration of the evidence,' the jury found it to be of the value of $3,000, and this appeal is from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor accordingly entered against the defendants, and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial, The contention of counsellor appellant, that plaintiff brought suit to recover the possession of certain specific and particularly described articles of personal property, and was permitted to recover for other and entirely different property, seems not to be sustained by the evidence. While he evidently claimed in his affidavit many items of property to which the undisputed evidence proved he was not entitled, it does not, as reversible error should, so satisfactorily or affirmatively appear that he in fact recovered for such articles, but the evidence seems rather to justify the inference that the verdict was based entirely upon opiniqn evidence as to the value of the stock, taken as a whole, rather than upon the aggregate values of specific items,
The foregoing views are expressed after a careful examina/tion of the questions upon which a rehearing was allowed, and lead us to the conclusion that the result reached in the former opinion is supported in all respects by reason and authority, and the same is therefore affirmed.