25 Mont. 296 | Mont. | 1901
delivered the opinion of tbe Court.
Action for damages for a conversion of a stock of merchandise.
The complaint alleges, in substance, that on August 22, 1896, the plaintiff was the owner and in possession, of a stock of merchandise at Browning, in Teton county; that the defendant Zimmerman was then, and at the time this suit was begun, the sheriff of said county, and that all the defendants, except Silverman and Cohen, were sureties upon his official bond; that on or about August 18, 1896, the defendants Silverman & Cohen, having brought an action in the district court of
Upon the filing of the answer, counsel for plaintiff filed a written motion asking the court to strike out this paragraph, on the ground that it was “immaterial, irrelevant, redundant,
1. Error is assigned upon the action of the trial court in striking out the last paragraph of the answer, on the ground that the defendants had no notice of the motion, and also upon the ground that the matter stated manifested an attempt on the part of the defendants- to plead an estoppel, and therefore any defect therein could only be reached by demurrer.- There is no merit in the assignment. Manifestly, the notice of the motion given defendants was sufficient for a hearing on August 2. It was also sufficient for any date thereafter, provided it was called up at the first opportunity, and at a time when counsel for' defendants was present, as in fact he was, when the motion was heard; for the record shows that the motion was granted after argument by counsel for both sides. Indeed, we think the court would have been justified in striking out the paragraph upon its own motion, if brought to> its attention at any time before or during the trial. The matters alleged were clearly redundant. The truth of them, as pleaded, if admitted or established by the evidence, would not be defense by way of estoppel (Sweetman v. Ramsey, 22 Mont.323, 56 Pac. 361), but would rebut the claim of title by plaintiff, and were therefore admissible as evidence, under the denials in the answer. (Gallick v. Bordeaux, 22 Mont. 470, 56 Pac. 961.) Such was the theory of the trial court, for the defendants were pei’-mitted, both upon cross-examination of the plaintiff and in the introduction of their own evidence-, to go fully into the situation at Browning, and the relations sustained to the business by Hamilton.
2. The plaintiff testified, in substance, on direct examina
The contract between plaintiff and Hamilton was properly admitted. It tended to show the exact relation between them in the conduct and ownership of the business at Browning, and to this extent to rebut and destroy the presumption of ownership in Hamilton arising from his apparently exclusive possession, management and control. The letters, however, should have been excluded. They did not, in themselves, tend to show title in plaintiff, nor were they so connected by other proof in the case with any of the goods in the stock as to demonstrate that plaintiff purchased any of the goods through them. Viewed in the most favorable light, they are, perhaps to be construed
3. Tbe goods in controversy consisted of a great variety of articles such as are usually kept in a country store. Tbe
4. At the close of the examination of this witness, the memorandum referred to was admitted in evidence over the objection of the defendants, for the jmrpose of showing- the cost of the goods. This ruling was clearly erroneous, though, perhaps, it did not result in prejudice to defendants; everything which it tended t,o show being already before the jury. The evidence was wholly incompetent and immaterial, and should have been excluded. So- far as the items of goods were concerned there was no controversy. The sheriff’s return showed what they were. The value of them depended upon the testimony of the witness, who spoke from knowledge upon that subject, and could not be shown by mere memoranda used by a witness as an aid to his memory.
5. Among the instructions submitted to the jury were the following paragraphs upon the burden of proof:
“The burden is upon the plaintiff to' show that at the times alleged he was the owner of, and entitled to the possession of, the goods, wares and merchandise in controversy, and that at said time the defendant John II. Zimmerman, as sheriff, wrongfully and unlawfully levied upon, sold and disposed of the said property, to the damage of the plaintiff. The burden is also upon the plaintiff- to show that the goods, wares and merchandise in controversy were of any greater value than one: thousand dollars, and that he has expended any sum necessarily in the pursuit of the said property, or in an effort to recover the same or the value thereof.
“The burden is upon the defendants to show that at the time of the levy and sale and disposal of the said property by the said John H. Zimmerman, as sheriff, the goods, wares and merchandise levied upon, sold and disposed of were the prop*305 erty of, and were owned by, A. B. Hamilton, the judgment debtor in the judgment upon which the execution ivas issued, under which the sheriff, John H. Zimmerman, claims to have sold and disposed of said property.”
The first of these instructions is a correct statement of the law upon the issues involved in the case, which are the ownership of the property and its value. In cases of this character, the plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the strength of his own title, and not’ upon the weakness of that of his adversary. Therefore the obligation rests upon him to sustain this burden by a preponderance of the evidence; that is, he must show by a preponderance of the evidence that he has a right superior to that of the defendant, and that the value of the property or the interest therein in question is greater than that admitted by the defendant. Hamilton being apparently in the exclusive possession, and therefore prima facie the owner at the time the levy was made, the endeavor on the part of the defendants to show title in him was but one mode of meeting and rebuiting plaintiff’s claim, and, after presenting their evidence, they would be entitled to a verdict, if the whole of the evidence upon this issue did not show a preponderance in plaintiff’s favor. (Finch v. Kent, 21 Mont. 268, 61 Pac. 653.) The defendants were not under obligation to produce any evidence until plain-1iff had made out a prima facie case, and then to go no further Ilian to produce sufficient evidence, to show an equipoise. The burden, therefore, rested upon the plaintiff throughout. These are elementary principles, applicable to all cases where there is an issue as to title, whether the defendant asserts title in himself or in a third person.
The second paragraph quoted is not only in direct conflict with the first, but it is wrong in principle. By it the jury were told, in substance, that, unless the defendants could show title in Hamilton by a preponderance of the evidence, the. plaintiff must prevail.
6. Appellants have assigned in their brief many errors based upon rulings of the trial court limiting the right of the-
No point has been made, either in argument or the briefs ■of counsel, as'to the liability in this action of the defendants who are sureties upon the official bond of defendant Zimmerman. We therefore express no opinion upon that question.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.