13 Or. 577 | Or. | 1886
This appeal is from a judgment rendered in an action brought by the respondent against the appellant for the recovery of the possession of personal property. It is alleged in the complaint in the action that the respondent was, and for more than a month past had been, the owner and entitled to the possession of the following goods and chattels, of the value of eleven hundred dollars, to wit: Sixty-eight head of hogs on the macadamized road in said county, on the place formerly kept by Wong Hin Soon; that the appellant, on the third day of September, 1884, at the county of Multnomah, without the consent of the said respondent, wrongfully took said hogs from respondent, the party having possession thereof, having wrongfully taken them from the respondent’s possession, and of which taking the appellant had due notice. A demand and refusal to deliver over the property was also alleged in the complaint, and a continued unlawful withholding of the possession of the chattels from the respondent, to his damage in the sum of $1,325. The demand for relief was for judgment against the appellant for the possession of the hogs, or
The words “the party having possession thereof, having wrongfully taken them from respondent’s (plaintiff’s) possession, and of which taking appellant (defendant) had due notice,” were on motion of appellant stricken out of the complaint. The appellant then filed an answer denying all the material allegations of the complaint. It appears from the bill of exceptions that the respondent gave testimony at the trial tending to show that the hogs belonged to him, and of their value, and that he was entitled to their possession, and that on the sixteenth day of August, 1884, the respondent delivered the hogs to said Wong Hin Soon to sell on commission, the respondent reserving the right to the possession of them on demand, and agreeing to pay Wong Hin Soon a reasonable price for feeding them while he should feed them; and'that thereafter and during the month of August, 1884, said Wong Hin Soon was sued by one or more of his creditors, and the hogs were taken by the sheriff on attachment as his property; that a few days after the attachment was levied, said Wong Hin Soon, under the insolvent act, made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors to the appellant, and thereby the attachment was dissolved; that the respondent, while the sheriff was in possession of the hogs, demanded them from him, but he refused to deliver them up, and after the attachment was dissolved delivered them to the appellant; that for several days prior to the attachment Wong Hin Soon had fed the hogs, and that it was worth about a dollar a month per head to so feed them, and that nothing had been paid for the feeding; that after 'the appellant got possession of the hogs, and prior to the
Thereupon the respondent rested his ease, and the appellant moved the court for a judgment of nonsuit. The court overruled the motion, and the appellant’s counsel excepted to the ruling. The appellant then gave evidence tending to show that he was appointed assignee of the estate of said Wong Hin Soon, insolvent, on the second day of September, 1884; that he took possession of sixty-eight hogs, as such assignee, then on the hog ranch recently theretofore occupied by said Wong Hin Soon; that said hogs were not the same hogs Wong Hin Soon bought of respondent; that said hogs had been butchered and sold; that appellant kept these hogs seven days, advertised them and sold them at public auction for $550; that he fed them during the seven days; that when respondent demanded the hogs from appellant, he, appellant, refused to deliver them up, without giving any reason therefor; that said hogs were the property of Wong Hin Soon at the date of said assignment; that the appellant did not say to respondent, when he demanded the said hogs, that they were his.
It further appears from the bill of exceptions that after the parties had rested their case on both sides, and their respective counsel had addressed the jury, the counsel for the appellant requested the court to charge the jury, in substance, that if they believed that at the time of the commencement of the action the respondent was indebted to the appellant, or to his assignor, for feeding the hogs claimed, or for having bestowed upon them any care, labor, or attention, at the request of the respondent, they
The case having been submitted to the jury, they returned the following verdict: “We, the jury in the above-entitled action, find for the plaintiff that he is entitled, and was at the time of the commencement of this action the owner of and entitled, to the immediate possession of that portion of property described in the complaint, to wit, forty-nine (49) hogs, and we assess the value of said property to which the plaintiff is entitled at $12 per head, aggregating'$588.” Upon which verdict the court entered judgment to the effect that the respondent recover the possession of the following personal property, to wit: Forty-nine head of the hogs described in the complaint herein, or $588, in case a delivery of said property cannot be had.
The appellant assigned as error the overruling of the motion for the nonsuit, the refusal to charge as requested,: the defectiveness of the verdict, and the irregularity of the judgment.
It appears to me that there are too good reasons for sustaining the ruling of the Circuit Court in its refusal to grant the motion for a nonsuit: 1st. That the claim of the appellant, at the time the demand for the possession of the hogs was made, that all of them were his, as such assignee, was inconsistent with the claim of a lien
But the objections to the verdict and judgment are more serious, and I apprehend are fatal to the respondent’s recovery. The action was to recover personal property in specie. At common law it would have been -an action of detinue and replevin, after the latter kind of action had been modified by statute so as to include replevin in the detinet. The general rule in such cases was that the thing detained must be ascertained with' such degree of certainty as to be specifically known and recovered. “ In order, therefore, to ground an action of detinue,” says Jacobs in his Law Diet., tit. Detinue, “ these points are necessary: 1. That the defendant come lawfully into possession of the goods, as either by delivery to him, or by finding them; 2. That the plaintiff have a property; 3. That the goods themselves be of some value; 4. That they be ascertained in point of identity.” And he further remarks, “that upon this, the
It is necessary to identify the property: 1. In order that the jury may assess its value; 2. In order that the sheriff may.be able to find and deliver it upon the execution; and 3. That the defendant in the action, if he desires, can restore it. Suppose the appellant should have preferred to deliver over the forty-nine hogs to the payment of the $558, how could it have been accomplished? There was undoubtedly a difference in the size and value of the hogs — was likely to be a material difference in that respect. The respondent could not be expected to accept all the smaller ones. A selection could not be made without the concurrence of the two parties to the action, and that could hardly be expected from Chinamen, especially when it concerned the division of a band of hogs. The attempt to secure an amicable partition of the swine would be very likely to result in other complications and difficulties. The judgment entered upon the verdict was, if possible, still more vague. The execution issued upon a judgment to deliver the possession of personal property must require the sheriff to deliver it to the party entitled thereto, and it must be particularly described in the writ. (Civil Code, sec. 273, subd. 4.) To issue a writ of execution upon the judgment under consideration, the clerk would have to require the sheriff to deliver to the respondent the possession of forty-nine head of the sixty-eight head of hogs on the macadamized road in the county of Mult- . nomah on the place formerly kept by Wong Hin Soon, and to satisfy the costs out of the personal property of the appellant, and $558 if a delivery thereof could not