It is claimed that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that, under an allegation of general ownership, a chattel mortgage permitting the property to remain in possession of the mortgagor until default in payment of the debt secured thereby is not evidence to sustain the same. The points are well taken. The petition fails to state that the plaintiff was the owner of or in the possession of the property on the date of the conversion; fails to state that the plaintiff was entitled to the immediate possession of the property at the time of the conversion; fails to state the year in which the conversion occurred, and fails to state the special ownership or iuterest in the property. In trover, plaintiff must either have the possession, or the immediate right of possession, of the property, to entitle him to recover. ( Wilson v. Fuller,
The precedents from all the books upon pleadings require that the petition must show that the plaintiff was in the actual possession of the property at the time of the conversion, or, if not in possession, that he was entitled to the immediate possession of the property. (2 Estee, Pl. & Pr., §2098; Maxw. Code Pl. 637.) Swan on Pleadings expressly states that the petition for the conversion of chattels must allege, “ if the plaintiff was not in possession,” that he “ was entitled to the immediate possession of the property.”
The petition does not state that the plaintiff was the owner of the property at the time of the conversion, but merely charges that the conversion was on “the 11th day of September.” The year is omitted. (Sawyer v. Robertson, 28 Pac. Rep. (Mont.) 456; Smith v. Force,
“ Where the plaintiff claims as sole owner, he must stand*122 or fall on that claim, and cannot, if his alleged title turns out to be invalid as against the true owner, fall back upon an alleged lien. The claim of title is a waiver of any lien, and, in any event, before he can claim the chattel by virtue of the lien, the false claim of title must be abandoned, the title of the true owner conceded, and the claim reduced to one of lien.”
Our statute provides that, in an affidavit for an order for the delivery of property, the plaintiff must show that he is the owner of the property, or has a special ownership or interest therein, stating the facts in relation thereto. (Civil Code, §177.) The code prescribes that there can be no feigned issues in pleadings, and that all pleadings must be written statements by the parties of the facts constituting their respective claims. (Civil Code, §§11, 84.) A petition in replevin, or for conversion, ought to advise the defendant of the nature of the plaintiff’s claim to the property, to the end that he can intelligently defend. Of course, the proof must sustain the material allegations of the judgment. (Kern v. Wilson,
The plaintiff’s interest in the property, upon the evidence offered, was only that of a mortgagee. There are authorities in some of the states holding that, after condition broken, the title to mortgaged personal property becomes absolute in the mortgagee, without redemption. Our statute contemplates a different rule. (Wolfley v. Rising,
According to the common and usual practice as it exists in this state, a plaintiff in replevin sets forth in his petition the facts which constitute his special interest or ownership in the property. (Lewis v. Burnham,
“A party to an action should not be allowed to obtain benefits from contradictory and inconsistent allegations deliberately made by himself in his pleadings. Our civil code does not contemplate any such thing. The spirit of our civil code is that a party shall state in his pleadings the real facts of his ease, and not falsehoods or fictions; and when each party states what he believes to be true and the real facts of his ease, the court may know precisely where the parties differ.” (Losch v. Pickett,36 Kas. 216 ; Wilson v. Fuller, 9 id. 176; Wolfley v. Rising, 12 id. 535; Hoisington v. Armstrong, 22 id. 110.)
Where the petition is defective for want of material averments, and such averments are not supplied by the answer, the petition is not cured thereby. (Wilhite v. Williams,
