205 N.W. 983 | Iowa | 1925
I. On or about March 8, 1924, the bailiff of the municipal court of the city of Des Moines levied an 1. BAILMENT: execution upon a Traffic 2-ton truck owned by lien: appellant, as the property of J.H. Lewis, the bailment judgment debtor. Immediate notice was given by from appellant to the bailiff of his ownership, and unauthorized the execution was released. The bailiff stored person. the truck in the garage of appellee, and when demand was made by appellant therefor, it was refused *1052 unless storage charges were paid. This action in replevin followed.
The evidence as to the ownership of the truck is not in dispute. The defense interposed was that replevin could not be maintained without a previous tender or the execution of a bond, as provided by Chapter 231, Acts of the Thirty-eighth General Assembly. Appellee asserts a claim to a lien under the statutes governing warehousemen, and also as a bailee for hire. It is clear that appellee was not engaged in the business of a warehouseman, and therefore was not entitled to a lien as such. What is said in Graben Motor Co. v. Brown Garage Co.,
It was held by the New York marine court in Loss v. Fry, 1 City Court Reps. 7, that a lien of a mechanic for work done upon a chattel, being given by law, takes precedence over the lien of a chattel mortgage previously filed. Brown v. Holmes,
II. When a controversy arises between the owner and a person claiming a lien upon his property, he may file bond, with appropriate sureties, in double the amount of the lien claimed, in the office of the clerk of the district court 2. LIENS: of the county in which the property is held, release by and, upon his doing so, the lien on the property bond. will be transferred to the bond, and if the party then in possession refuses to surrender the same to the owner, the latter may recover the same in an action in replevin. Chapter 459, Code of 1924. This chapter is permissive, and not mandatory. Compliance therewith is not a condition precedent to the right to maintain an action under the statute for the recovery of specific personal property, but is an additional remedy afforded the owner to recover his property. Under the foregoing provision of the Code, the question as to the existence or the amount of a lien may be litigated. There is no reason why the owner of personal property may not maintain an action for the recovery thereof without filing such bond, if the person in possession in fact has no lien thereon, and is not entitled to detain the property. This, we think, must have been the thought of the legislature.
The conclusion follows that a verdict was erroneously directed in the court below, and the judgment is reversed. — Reversed.
FAVILLE, C.J., and EVANS and VERMILION, JJ., concur. *1054