45 Md. 582 | Md. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellants brought replevin against the appellee for a certain quantity of type and other materials of a
Before noticing the several rulings brought up for review, it is proper to ascertain the legal rights and responsibilities of the parties upon the state of facts thus presented. In the first place we think it quite clear the defendant acquired hy his purchase from Stewart, no right to, or interest in, the goods conveyed to the plaintiff's hy the hill of sale. By the recording of that instrument, he was affected with notice of the plaintiff's’ title, notwithstanding the grantor remained in possession of the property conveyed. By having the conveyance recorded within the time prescribed hy the statute, the title of the grantee, though the grantor still retains possession, is as perfect, and is protected as effectually as if the sale had been accompanied hy delivery. Clary vs. Frayer, 8 G. & J., 416. The defendant having acquired nothing more
Having thus stated the law which must control the rights and obligations of the parties, we proceed to dispose of the several rulings excepted to, and that can now be done very briefly. One of the material errors pervading several of the granted instructions is, that they put to the jury as affecting the rights of the plaintiffs, the facts that the defendant purchased all the goods from Stewart for a valuable consideration, and was in possession of the same as his property at the time the writ of replevin was served. We have shown that by such purchase the plaintiffs’ rights could in no wise he abridged or injuriously affected, and that in respect to those rights the defendant must stand in the shoes of Stewart, his vendor. There is no proof in the case, that the defendant himself made or caused the intermingling, and therefore the finding of that fact should not have been left to the jury in any of the prayers. We have also said the doctrine of confusion, that is the blending of goods of separate owners.
It follows from what has been said that the plaintiffs’ third prayer (omitting the commingling by the defendant) ought to have been granted without the qualification added by the Court, and that the defendant’s first prayer ought to have been rejected. We are also of opinion the plaintiffs’ fourth prayer (with the like omission as to the intermixture by the defendant, and substitution of inter-mixture by Stewart, under whom the defendant claims,) ought to have been granted; for it cannot be successfully contended that the defendant claiming under a party who has thus intermixed his property, with that of a similar kind belonging to the plaintiffs, can defeat their attempt to identify their own property and then, by so doing, defeat their action of replevin if other property so intermixed is innocently seized and taken by the officer serving the writ. In connection with this prayer the instruction given by the Court which is even more favorable to the plaintiffs was properly granted, and the defendant’s second prayer ought to have been rejected. The position taken by the plaintiffs’ counsel in support of their second prayer, that the defendant, having pleaded property in himself, the law imposed upon him the burden of sustaining his plea by affirmative evidence, was very properly abandoned at bar. The reverse has been the settled law of this State since the case of Cutlum vs. Bevans, 6 H. & J. 479.
Judgment reversed, and new trial aiuarded.