-This is an action in claim and delivery. ‘The complaint is in the ordinary form and alleges ownership and a right of possession in the plaintiff to certain personal property. The defendant (appellant in this court) denied specifically the allegations of the complaint, and then filed what is denominated a further answer and defense. In this further answer and defense, the defendant set up the •organization of the Idaho Placer Mining Company, and an effort made to dissolve said company and reincorporate under •the title of The Idaho Placer Mining Company, Ltd. That during the existence of the old corporation, the defendant herein became the owner of 397,000 shares of capital stock .of said company and is still the owner of 169,000 shares. That the defendant sold 225,000 shares for $10,000 to one John W. Waitz, and agreed with said John W. Waitz that said .sum of $10,000 should be used by the defendant for the purpose of building a dredge for the said Idaho Placer Mining Company, and that in accordance with said agreement, the defendant planned and constructed a mining dredge, expending therein $10,000, and by reason of said sum not being ■sufficient to finish said dredge, this defendant incurred personal obligations and expended his own funds in the sum of $285.82, and performed personal services in the planning and ■constructing of the same of the value of $5 per day, amounting to $1,825, which with the $10,000 made the total cost •of the dredge $12,110.82. That in order to raise funds for the purpose of paying the outstanding indebtedness of the Idaho Placer Mining Company, to this defendant and other
That at the time the agreement aforesaid was made, it was also agreed that this defendant should be employed as the general manager of the dredging plant at a fixed salary, which was a part of the consideration to the defendant for his executing and delivering to the plaintiff a bill of sale for the said dredging plant. That the plaintiff is indebted to him for his services in planning and constructing the dredge, and for moneys expended by him in the construction of the samé in the sum of $2,110.82, which is due and unpaid. And that plaintiff never was entitled to an accounting for the money spent in the construction of said dredge plant, and never had any interest in or title to the said dredging plant, after the bill of sale was made. And that the defendant executed the bill of sale, and trusted to the honesty of the Idaho Placer Mining Company, Limited, its directors and officers; but that said bill of sale was without consideration, and that the consideration has never been paid by the plaintiff as agreed upon. That the moneys expended by the defendant in excess of the sums received by him from John W. Waitz, and the labor expended by him upon the planning and construction of said dredge were expended and laid out for the improvement and completion of said plant while the same was in his possession, and that he has a special lien upon said plant for said moneys and for his services in the sum of $2,110.82, no part of which has been paid.
To this further answer and defense the plaintiff interposed a general demurrer on the ground that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense to the complaint.
The court sustained the demurrer. The eause was tried to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment rendered accordingly. A statement of the case was prepared and settled, upon which defendant moved
The first' error assigned and argued in this court was the sustaining of the demurrer to the further answer and defense. The court committed no error in sustaining this demurrer. All the facts attempted to be plead by this further answer and defense, in so far as the same was competent and constituted a defense, could be proved under a special denial.
In the ease of Gallick v. Bordeaux, 22 Mont. 470, 56 Pac. 961, the supreme court of Montana quotes with approval from Mr. Phillips on Code Pleading as follows: “A general denial puts in issue all the essential averments of the complaint, puts the burden of proving them upon the plaintiff, and admits evidence by the defendant (1) to controvert plaintiff’s evidence, (2) to disprove his allegations, and (3) to prove other and inconsistent facts. Under such denial, the defendant may prove his right to possession, or that he, as an officer, levied on the property at the suit of a creditor of him from whom the plaintiff obtained it in fraud of creditors, or he may show title in a stranger.” To the same effect are Lindsay v. Wyatt, 1 Ida. 738; Cornwall v. Mix, 3 Ida. 687, 34 Pac. 893; Jones v. McQueen, 13 Utah, 178, 45 Pac. 202; Summerville v. Stockton Milling Co., 142 Cal. 529, 76 Pac. 243.
Under the general denial the defendant may show his right to possession by virtue of a lien. (Lindsay v. Wyatt, 1 Ida. 738; Williams v. Ashe, 111 Cal. 180, 43 Pac. 595; Sutton v. Stephan, 101 Cal. 545, 36 Pac. 106.) General denial as used in these cases means the same as a special denial under the statute of this state where the complaint is verified.
Upon the trial of the cause, one Edward C. Cleaver, the general manager of the Idaho Placer Mining Company, Limited, testified on behalf of the plaintiff. In the course of his testimony he produced (and it was admitted in evidence), his appointment as agent and general manager of said company. He testified to a demand made upon the defendant for the property in controversy in this case. ■ He also produced
The defendant having been called as a witness in his. own behalf, on direct examination, was asked by his counsel this
It appears from the evidence that in another action in the district court of Washington county wherein the Idaho Placer Mining Company, Limited, was plaintiff, and the plaintiff herein was defendant, in a cross-complaint filed in said action certain allegations and statements were made which the plaintiff in this action claims contradicted the defendant’s testimony, and the plaintiff offered such cross-complaint in evidence for the purpose of impeaching and contradicting the defendant’s testimony in this action.
Upon the trial the defendant called as a witness on his behalf, O. M. Harvey, who was secretary of the Idaho Placer Mining Company at the time the bill of sale and deed referred to in this opinion were made. And counsel for defendant asked him to produce the by-laws of the company, and offered in evidence article 9 of such by-laws for the purpose of showing that the meeting held which resulted in the making of the bill of sale and deed was not called in accordance with the by-laws of said company. This was not error. The old company was making no objection to said transfer and was not seeking to avoid the same, and the defendant is not in a position to make such claim for said company, especially in view of the fact that he signed the bill of sale as president, and so far as the old company is concerned, it surrendered the right of possession under said transfer to the plaintiff herein. In an action in claim and delivery, the real question at issue is the right of possession of the property in controversy, and this being the issue, it is competent for the defendant tQ offer any evidence which may tend to show that the plaintiff did not have the right of possession at the time the action was commenced, as the plaintiff’s right to recover depends wholly upon its right to possession. The court in this ease should have admitted all evidence offered by the defendant which in any way challenged or contradicted the plaintiff’s right to possession at the time the action was commenced. The judgment in this