This is an action of replevin for certain cattle, sheep, horses, and other personal property, which the defendant, as town treasurer, took by virtue of a tax warrant for certain unpaid taxes upon certain land owned by the plaintiff and occupied by her together with her husband and their family. The property, when so seized, was upon and used upon said 'land. The property was taken by the writ and delivered to the plaintiff. The verdict was mainly directed by the court, and the jury found the value of the property to be $1,625, and the damages for the taking, $29.62. On the trial, after proof that the property was hers, and that the defendant took the same, and the. value thereof, and her damages, the plaintiff introduced in evidence the proceedings in a former action between the same parties, and in the same court, and the injunction therein in respect to the same tax and the same property. The injunction in that case was to restrain the defendant, as treasurer, from collecting said tax, on the ground of its illegality, and the bill prayed for setting aside and vacating the said tax on the same ground. There was a demurrer to the complaint and a motion to dissolve the injunction, which motion was overruled, .and the defendant appealed to this court from said order, and it was decided iby this court that the complaint did not state a sufficient cause of action in equity, or any ground for equitable relief or for an injunction; and the order of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded with direction to that court to dissolve the injunction. The complaint in that case was to the effect that the plaintiff, Adelaide Kaehler, was the owner of the land taxed, and that such tax was void, and that the same personal property involved in this, suit, which belonged to her, was
. On this evidence the defendant requested the court to direct the jury to find for him in the action, and on refusal excepted, and the court directed the jury to find for the plaintiff as above stated. The record does not show the ground upon which this direction was made, but presumably on the ground that the property was seized by the defendant in violation of the injunction. When this case was tried, the record, together with the judgment of this court in the injunction case, had been remitted.
From the above statement of this case, certain well-established principles of law are clearly applicable, and must govern it.
It is contended by the learned counsel of the respondent
First, then, the violation of the injunction by the defendant was no good ground for the plaintiff’s recovery in this case. Kaelder v. Dubberpuhl, §6 Wis., 497, and cases Cited in the opinion.'
Second. It is contended that because the name of the plaintiffs husband, Peter F. Kaehler, stood upon the assessment roll opposite the said land of the plaintiff as the owner or occupant of it, the tax must be held to be his tax, and the warrant would not justify the taking of her property upon it. In both the two former cases, the plaintiff predicated her rights upon the ground, in the first, that she was the owner of the property that was threatened to be taken, for the tax;' and'that she was the owner of the land upon which, the tax was assessed, and, if legally assessed, she was liable to pay it; and,, in the second, that she was the owner of the property actually taken by the defendant for the tax, and that the tax was upon her land. The plaintiff is clearly es-topped by these records from showing that the tax upon
Third. The plaintiff has obtained the delivery or return of the property taken by the writ, b}7 making the requisite affidavit that this property “ had not been taken for a tax, assessment, or fine, pursuant to the statute.” On the trial it clearly appeared by the evidence that this property had been taken by the defendant for a tax on the land of the plaintiff, and that the tax was valid. This being so, the plaintiff had no right to the delivery of the property on final judgment, or to retain it, if already delivered, after judgment. By the affidavit she has obtained a deliver}7, but when it was shown on the trial that it had been taken for a tax upon her land which she was liable to pay, by the judgment she should be made to return it. The affidavit is not conclusive of the fact, by any means, that it was not taken for a tax, when the facts on the trial show otherwise. To hold that it was,
Fourth. It appears by the aforesaid proceedings in contempt against, the defendant that the plaintiff claimed damages and indemnity for the wrongful taking of the property in violation of the injunction, and obtained an award of $50 for the same. It is true that any right which the plaintiff might have to bring any future action for the property is reserved. But the plaintiff might in that proceeding have obtained full and complete indemnity, if she was entitled to any, and that proceeding and judgment are as much a former recovery and a bar to this action as if she had done so. Iier damages by reason of this alleged wrongful taking of her property in violation of the injunction are indivisible, and if she has proceeded in that way and by such a remedy, which is ample and adequate, to obtain only a part, when she could as well have recovered the whole of her damage, the former recovery as a bar is just as complete as if she had recovered all. It is true this defense was not pleaded, but the evidence was introduced without objection which establishes such a defense, and should have had effect in a direction to .the jury as requested by the defendant. This principle has often been established by the decisions of this court. Borngesser v. Harrison, 12 Wis., 544; Driscoll v. Damp, 16 Wis., 106; Eastman v. Porter, 14 Wis., 39; Dick v. Webster, 6 Wis., 481. But, if there should be any .doubt about this, this court decided, in the contempt case, that she had suffered no wrong or damage by the taking of her property for this tax, and reversed the judgment for the allowance made. This is certainly conclusive in the same litigation. ...
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.