55 Ark. 423 | Ark. | 1892
On the 7th of November, 1889, David Markley, who was the husband of Minerva Markley, sold a certain horse to Ed Lafargue and executed to him a bill of sale, in which he recited that he had sold the horse to Lafargue, and received for him $150. Beneath the bill of sale was an order to Minerva to deliver the horse to Lafargue, which was signed by the husband. John King presented this order to the wife on Sunday following the sale. The horse was delivered to King on the same day. About two months thereafter this action was brought by the wife against Lafargue for the possession of the horse.
Upon the trial of the action there was no evidence adduced to show that the wife had given the husband authority to sell the horse. He was sold and the bill of sale was executed in Little Rock in her absence and while she was in a distant county. At this time, it seems, the husband was accused of a criminal offense, and was held to answer the same in the district court of the United States held at Little Rock.
Mrs. Markley testified that the horse was her property, and had been purchased for her and paid for with her own money; that the order was presented to her by King on Sunday; that when he presented it she asked him where her husband was, and he said he “had run off,” and advised her to make him keep out of the way of the United States marshal, and then and after this presented the order; that she never said he might, or could not, take the horse; that she was so troubled that she did not know what to do; that her son Oscar caught the horse and King took him off; that King told her that he did not know what Lafargue paid for the horse, or that he had paid anything, and that she never said anything to Lafargue about the horse before or since the commencement of this suit.
King testified that when he presented the order to Mrs. Markley, she said the horse was in the field, and told her son Oscar to go and get him, which he did and delivered him to King, and that she made no objection to his taking the horse; and that he took the horse and delivered him to Lafargue. The defendant asked King the question : “Have you had any interest in or anything to do with the horse since you turned him over to Lafargue ? ” The plaintiff objected to it, and the court refused to allow it to be answered ; and the defendant excepted. King denied having the conversation with Mrs. Markley about which she testified.
Lafargue testified that he purchased the horse of David Markley, and paid $150 for him.
Instructions were given at the instance of the plaintiff over the objections of the defendant, and others were asked for by the defendant and refused by the court. The result of the trial ’was a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the recovery of the horse. A motion for a new trial was filed by Lafargue, which was denied; and he appealed.
The appellant asked and the court refused to instruct the jury as follows:
(1.) “A bill of sale is an executed contract, and the sufficiency of the consideration cannot be questioned by plaintiff.”
(2.) “The law says married women may schedule their separate property; and if she fails to do this, the burden of proof is on her to show that the same is her separate property.”
(3.) “If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was the owner of the horse in controversy, but had permitted her husband, D. B. Markley, to sell the same, and further believe that said D. B. Markley did sell said horse to Ed Lafargue, they should find a verdict for the defendant.”
(4.) “If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff had personal property in her own right, but had given her husband control of the same and allowed him to dispose of it, then she could not afterwards revoke any sale so made by her husband.”
All these requests were properly refused. Appellee claimed the property in controversy as her own, and the court instructed the jury that the burden was on her to prove that the horse was her property; and there was no evidence to show that she had authorized her husband to sell, or that the husband sold as her agent.
Another request was as follows : “If the jury believe from the evidence that D. B. Markley executed the bill of sale,, and gave a written order on the same to the plaintiff to deliver up the horse to Ed Lafargue, and she did deliver him on presentation of the same, it is a. ratification of the sale as made, and they will find for the defendant.”
There was no evidence that the husband sold the horse for or on behalf of the appellant. But assuming there could be a ratification in such a case, the request was properly refused ; for it assumed that the delivery of the horse was a ratification, without regard to the intention of the appellee in making the delivery, when there was evidence tending to prove there was no intent to ratify. For she testified that when the order was presented she was in much trouble on account of her husband, so much so that she did not know what to do; and neither consented nor refused to deliver the horse. From this it might be inferred that she had not determined what course she would pursue as to the sale of the horse at the time of the delivery; and that, at that time, there was no specific intent to ratify the sale. The mere delivery of- the horse, without any intention to-ratify the same, would not estop Mrs. Markley from claiming the horse. Lafargue was not induced by any act of hers to purchase the horse. He was sold without her knowledge and in her absence. Neither was Lafargue damaged by any act of hers ; nor was there any duty resting up.on her to-make an effort to reclaim the property, or to notify the purchaser that it was hers. /
The following instructions were given by the court over the objections of the appellant: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the horse in controversy is the property of the plaintiff, Minerva Markley, no sale or conveyance of her husband can defeat her right to the same or prevent her recovery in this action.” (2.) If thejury believe from the evidence that the sale from Markley to Lafargue was procured by fraud or is without consideration, it would not effect the title to the horse, even if he belonged to Markley.” They were harmless for the reason the court instructed the jury that “the burden of proof” was “ on the plaintiff, and before she” could “ recover in this action it must appear from, a preponderance of the testimony that the horse in controversy ” was “ the separate property of the plaintiff.”
Another instruction given over the objection of the defendant was : “ Even if the jury believe that Mrs. Markley delivered the horse to King, and it was done on Sunday, such delivery cannot operate in any manner against her right, because the same was void, being done on Sunday.” If it be conceded that this instruction was erroneous, it was-not prejudicial to appellant, for the reason the sale was made-by the husband in his own name and for his own benefit and there was no confirmation by the appellee. There was no' evidence that he was or assumed to act as her agent. There was no question of agency, and consequently there was nothing to ratify. She could have confirmed the sale, but this could not have been done by a simple ratification. A confirmation, to have been binding upon her, must have rested upon some consideration upholding it, or upon an estoppel. Hamlin v. Sears, 82 N. Y., 327: People v. Supervisor of Onondaga, 16 Mich., 259; Mechem on Agency, sec. 162; Wharton on Agency, sections 62-63 > Ewell’s Evans on Agency, star pages 62-63. There was no evidence in this-case tending to prove either, and the instruction did no injury.
The refusal of the court to permit King to answer the question propounded to him was not prejudicial. There •was no evidence that he was interested in the property in’ «controversy.
Judgment affirmed.