53 Vt. 684 | Vt. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant excepted to the holding of the County Court, that the evidence showed a sufficient change of possession of the sleigh to protect it from attachment as the property of the vendor. The sleigh was purchased by the plaintiff while it was being stored by Waite, the vendor, with other sleighs and wagons in the cider-mill of Pierce. So long as it remained at that place, there was no change of possession. The vendor hired and had possession of the cider-mill for the purpose of storing his wagons and sleighs. Did what transpired afterward show a change of possession ? Waite’s sleighs and wagons, and this among them, were removed from the cider-mill by Pierce. Knowledge of their removal was carried by Waite to the plaintiff; and the plaintiff thereupon engaged the vendor “ to get some one to move it for him to some place for storage, or- put it under cover, until he could get round and get it, and Waite had his son attend to it, and he moved it to Orcutt’s barn.” The son was working for his father, and had the principal charge of his business in his father’s absence. Orcutt was at home when the sleigh was taken to his barn ; but it was not shown what took place between the son and Orcutt, if anything, at the time the sleigh was moved there. This, in substance, was the evidence to show a change of possession. If the son hired Orcutt’s barn for the plaintiff, and placed the sleigh there for him, thereafter it would be in the plaintiff’s possession, and protected from attachment on the debts of the vendor. Bailey v. Quint, 22 Vt. 464; Pettingill v. Elkins, 50 Vt. 431. To protect the sleigh from being attached as the property of Waite, the burden was upon the plaintiff to show that the barn was in fact hired for him for the purpose of storing the sleigh. The most he shows, is, that he engaged the vendor to get some one to get the sleigh stored somewhere for him. This comes short of
The evidence of the declaration of the vendor made after the time he testified he had sold the sleigh, that the sleigh was his, was properly excluded. He was not a party to the suit, and his declarations could not be shown as admissions. The only purpose for which they could legitimately have been shown, would be to impeach his credibility as a witness. But, to lay the foundation for their introduction for that purpose, he should have been inquired of, when on the stand, as a witness, in regard thereto, under the rules pertaining to the use of such testimony. The evidence of the cost to manufacture the several parts of the sleigh, in aid of the witness’s judgment of its value at the time of the conversion, was properly admitted. Any evidence was admissible on the question of damages, which legitimately tended to show what its value was at that time. But we think the court erred in excluding testimony of what it sold for at the sheriff’s sale. The question to be determined was, its cash, market value at the time of the conversion. What it sold for, near that time, at a regular sheriff’s sale, advertised, and made under the guards and restrictions which the law throws round such sales, would at least have
The judgment of the County Court is reversed, and the cause remanded.