23 Neb. 736 | Neb. | 1888
This was an action in the district court of Cass county, brought by the plaintiff against the defendants,' for the conversion of forty acres of standing corn grown upon the north-west quarter of the south-west quarter of section sixteen in township eleven north of range thirteen east, in said county, of the value of $200. The answer of the defendants was a general denial. There was a trial to a jury, with a finding and judgment for the plaintiff against both of the defendants, in the sura of $94.
The defendants bring the cause to this court on error, and assign the following errors:
First error formal.
2. The verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence.
3. The verdict is contrary to law.
4. The court erred in admitting in evidence the record of the sheriff’s return of the pretended levy upon and sale of the corn in controversy.
5. The court erred in admitting in evidence the return of the sheriff of the pretended levy upon and sale of the corn in controversy.
6. The court erred in refusing to give the ikst, fifth, and eighth instructions asked in behalf of defendants.
7. The court erred in giving the first, second, and third paragraphs of instructions asked by plaintiff.
8. The court erred in giving the fourth instruction on its own motion.
9. Errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to.
10. The verdict is for the plaintiff, when, under the law and the evidence, it should have been for the defendants.
On the trial the plaintiff offered the page of the docket of the county judge containing the record of a judgment in favor of James A. Walker v. Wm. T. Johnson,'having
The plaintiff then offered in evidence an execution issued by Judge Russell, county judge of Cass county, on the 12th day of September, 1885, after having identified it by the testimony of said county judge. The defendants objected to the introduction of the said paper in evidence, as incompetent, immaterial, and irrelevant. And for the further-reason that the time of the receipt of the writ is not endorsed upon the same; and for the further reason that the advertisement of the sale of the said property was not made in pursuance of law, not having been published in some newspaper; and for the further reason that the return does not show that the property was sold, when it was, or who was present at the place of sale, and does not show that the property was .sold to the highest bidder, which objection was overruled and the evidence admitted.
Without referring to the questions raised by defendants as to the admissibility of the record evidence as above set •out, or the effect thereof, which will be hereafter considered, but taking up the points in the order presented, I will examine the evidence upon the admissibility of which no point is presented.
It appears that the defendant, John Johnson, was and still is the owner, by purchase from the state, of the land
It appears in evidence that, on the 24th day of July, 1884, before the Hon. C. Russell, county judge of Cass ■county, the plaintiff, James A. Walker, by the consideration of said county judge, recovered a judgment against the said Wm.'T. Johnson in an action then and there pending for the sum of one hundred eleven dollars.and twenty ■cents, and one dollar and forty cents, costs of suit, total, one hundred twelve dollars and forty (sic) cents; that on the 12th day of September, 1885, the said county judge issued an execution on the said judgment, and placed it in the hands of J. C. Eikenbary, sheriff of said county; that on the 14th day of September, 1885, the said sheriff levied ■the said execution on forty acres of standing corn in the ■field, described as growing on the north-west quarter of
The question that arises under this head of our inquiry is, whether the defendant, John Johnson, was possessed of a property in, and title to, the corn, that would shield it from an execution against the property of Wm. T. Johnson. It was in the exclusive possession of the latter, and was the product of his sole labor. On the other hand, the inchoate title to the land that produced it was in the former, and there was an agreement, or understanding, between the two, that a possible remainder of the product of such land should be the property of the former. I am unable to make any application of the further claim on the part of the defendants, arising out of the consideration of the money advanced by the father to the son, or the contingent liabilities which he had assumed and was still bound for in his behalf.
It may, be admitted- as a principle of law that the 'owner of the soil will be presumed, prima facie, to be the owner of the growing crops standing upon it. But this must be taken in connection with another and controlling presumption, to-wit, that the person in possession is the owner of the soil, as well as of the growing crops thereon. • Considering these two presumptions together, and applying them to the case at bar, had no one been in the actual possession of the farm on which the corn was raised, at the time of the levy, then the owner of the soil, even by the inchoate
Counsel for plaintiff in error, in the brief, say, that the contract between the Johnsons, which they assume was made on the 1st day of March, 1885, “was not in the nature of a security for the payment of the debts owing by Wm. T. Johnson to John Johnson, but was an actual payment of the debts, so far as the surplus of the corn over and above the living expenses of William was concerned, and so far as it went it transferred absolutely the title to, and right of possession of, all the surplus corn raised, to John Johnson,” etc. I cannot agree to this proposition. Payment, as I understand it, is the actual delivery, passing, or surrender of something which actually satisfies a debt or obligation. No agreement or promise to pay or de
To the fourth and fifth assignments of error, counsel cite section 484 of the code of civil procedure. This section of statute is applicable only to executions issued out of a court of record, upon which lands may be levied upon and sold. The execution in the ease at bar was issued upon a judgment rendered in a non-term case in the county court, and Tails within the provisions of sections 1067 et seq. of the code. These provisions do not require the officer receiving an execution to endorse thereon the hour of its receipt; nor do they require the notice of sale to be “published in some newspaper;” nor that' the return should show that the property was sold to the highest bidder. Moreover, if all of these things were required of the officer making the levy and sale, the question of their observance in a case like this could only be raised by a direct proceeding. Such want of observance by the officer would not affect the title of a purchaser in good faith.
The Illinois cases cited, with the exception of Davidson v. Waldron, 31 Ill., 121, are where personal property, which by its nature was susceptible, in its then condition, of asportation, was either levied on or sold by the officer without taking or having it under his control. In such cases the rule, as laid down by Judge Breese in the case
The rules of law governing the levy and sale, upon execution, of crops of growing corn, or other grain, or tame grass, are peculiar, and not applicable to other species of personal property, and do not require any act on the part of the officer, so far as the levy is concerned, which, were it not for the protection of the writ, would make him a trespasser. Such an act in the case at bar was unnecessary and impracticable, and would have answered no purpose. It may be admitted to have been his duty to notify all persons present at. the time of the levy. This he did by notifying the wife of William T. Johnson, the only person present. The law requires that personal property should be in sight at the time of sale; also that the sale be made “at the house or on the premises where such property was taken, or at one of the most public places within the precinct.” Sec. 1067, Code. These conditions appear from the evidence to have been sufficiently complied with.
The following portion of instruction No. 4, of instructions given by the court on its own motion, forms the foundation of the 8th assignment of error, as insisted upon in the brief: “A verbal lien or agreement between the defendants, by which John Johnson was to have the corn in controversy, under certain conditions, would not constitute title or ownership therein sufficient to entitle him
The refusal by the court to give instructions No. 1, 5, and 8, asked for by defendants, is complained of by them in their sixth assignment. I copy the instructions offered: “No. 1. You are instructed that a debtor, even in failing ■circumstances, has the right to pay or secure the bona fide demand of one of his creditors, to the exclusion of others. •5. To establish collusion between defendants, for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of Wm. T. Johnson, it must appear by a clear preponderance of the evidence that both defendants had knowledge of the liability and indebtedness of William Johnson, and that both defendants entered into the agreement regarding the cultivation •of the land, with full knowledge of such indebtedness, and with intent to defraud the creditors of William T. Johnson. 8. The court instructs the jury that, as a matter of law, personal property, when sold under execution, must be in the custody of the officer making the sale, and must be in view of the officer and bidders at the time of sale thereof, .and must be sold to the highest bidder for cash.”
While the 8th instruction asked expresses the law as applicable .to sales of personal property generally, yet if applied to.a field of standing corn, that part of the instruction which requires the property to be in the custody of the officer would be liable to mislead the jury, as actual possession or custody on the part of the officer would be-both unnecessary and impossible, as long as the farm, of which the field of corn constituted a part, was in the actual possession of the defendant, Wm. T. Johnson. Hence, as the instruction could not be given as a whole, in the form in which it was presented, it was 'rightfully refused^
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.