54 Neb. 776 | Neb. | 1898
Clarence I. Heffley was engaged in business as a merchant tailor in the city of Lincoln, and on August 11, 1893, executed in favor of his mother a chattel mortgage on all his business stock, fixtures, and tools, and two or three days subsequent to the execution of the mortgage delivered it to the attorney or agent for his mother in the city to which we have referred, she then being in another state. At a later date writs of attachment were obtained to issue by some creditors of the son and were placed in the hands of the defendant in error, then a constable, for service and were by him levied on the property described in the mortgage or a portion thereof. The plaintiff in error brought this, an action of replevin, to recover the possession of the property, and the main issue litigated was of the mortgage to the mother, whether it was Iona fide or fraudulent. The jury by its-verdict determined it to be the latter, and the judgment of the court was in accord with the verdict.
It is urged for plaintiff in error that the trial court
It is contended that the trial court erred in instruction numbered 7, or in a portion of it which contained the statement, “In this case it appears from the evidence and admissions of the plaintiff in open court that the mortgage under which the plaintiff claims was of a much greater amount than that actually due plaintiff from the mortgagor;” that this was not warranted by the testimony on the subject of the indebtedness of the son to the mother. While it possibly'might have been better
Paragraph 6 of the charge to the jury was pertinent and applicable to the issues in view of the evidence adduced, and when read and construed in connection with the other instructions.
Of instruction numbered 8 it is complained that it was improper, in that it informed the jury that there was testimony which tended to show a certain designated fact. There was testimony of the nature and effect indicated by the statement, and there was no error in the use of the language employed in the connection in which it was used by the court.
Instruction numbered 11, of which complaint is made, was proper in view of all the testimony on the subject to which it related — the authority of the party therein named to act for the plaintiff in error in the transaction involved in this litigation.
It is contended that instruction. 13 was erroneous. This instruction was one in relation to the form and substance of the verdict for defendant. It is also urged that the verdict was not in conformity to the requirements of the law. The verdict was as follows: “We, the jury, duly impaneled and sworn in the above entitled cause, do find that the right of property and right of possession of the property in controversy herein, at the time of the commencement of this action, was in the defendant, and we assess the present value of the defendant’s interest in said property at the sum of $586.15. We also assess the damages sustained by said defendant by reason of the wrongful detention of said property at the sum of one cent.” Whether paragraph 13 of the instructions was in all its statements and directions technically correct, we need not decide. It submitted to the jury the
It is also argued that the verdict was not supported by sufficient evidence. We do not deem it necessary to enter upon a discussion of the evidence in detail herein. We have examined it and must conclude that while a contrary verdict might not have been disturbed as without support in the evidence; there was sufficient thereof to sustain the one rendered, and it will be allowed to stand. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.