264 P. 477 | Cal. | 1928
Action brought to recover possession of certain personal property of the alleged value of $1,250, and for $10,000 damages for the unlawful detention thereof. Plaintiff claimed to have been in possession of said personal property by virtue of a lease from C.H. Coddington, the owner thereof, and that defendants, on the fifteenth day of June, 1925, without plaintiff's consent and wrongfully, entered upon the premises on which said personal property was situated and removed the same therefrom. The defendant Bercovich asserted title to said personal property through an execution sale thereof in an action wherein E. Sorenson was plaintiff and the said C.H. Coddington was defendant; that at said sale, held on June 15, 1925, the defendants Feigenberg Bros. became the purchasers of said personal property and immediately thereafter sold the same to defendant Bercovich. The court rendered judgment for defendants and plaintiff has appealed.
[1] The writ of execution under which said property was sold is the same writ which was the subject of consideration by the district court of appeal, first district, first division, in the case of Sorenson v. Coddington,
[2] But appellant bases his right to recover possession of said personal property, and damages for its retention, upon the allegations of his complaint that defendants "without plaintiff's consent and wrongfully and unlawfully entered upon the premises above described, so belonging to plaintiff, and forcibly and wrongfully entered the building in which said personal property was located and removed the same from said premises." This allegation of the complaint was denied by respondents, who also plead that appellant was estopped from asserting any right, title, claim, *350 or interest in said personal property by reason of his conduct prior to, during, and subsequent to the sale of said personal property and the purchase thereof by the respondents. Upon these issues the court found for the respondents. There is no question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the court. In brief, the evidence shows that before the issuance of said purported writ of execution the appellant informed the attorney for Sorenson, the plaintiff in said action, that said personal property was in his possession, and that it belonged to Coddington, the judgment debtor in said action; thereupon the attorney suggested that he would have execution issued in said action and levy upon and sell said personal property under said writ of execution. This was done and appellant was present at said sale and made no claim to said personal property. The purchasers at said sale were respondents Feigenberg Bros., who bid $130, and said property was sold to them for said sum. They afterward sold the same to the respondent Bercovich. Bercovich, about a week before the sale under the execution, visited the appellant and the latter pointed out the personal property which he now claims, and in answer to a question asked by Bercovich as to whether he (appellant) was interested in it, the latter replied: "I don't want this junk. I am not interested in it," and after the sale the appellant disconnected the pumps (a portion of the personal property claimed was a number of pumps used at gasoline filling stations) and helped load them and the other personal property upon a truck which the respondent Bercovich had sent to appellant's place of business for the purpose of removing said personal property from the premises of appellant. This evidence, as we have said before, is ample to support respondent's plea of estoppel. It also disproves the allegations of appellant's complaint that the property was taken from him without his consent. It shows, on the other hand, that appellant not only acquiesced in its taking, but that he disclaimed any interest in it and assisted in its removal. Under this state of facts the appellant has no legal claim for damages for the taking of said personal property from his possession, nor for the detention thereof by the respondent Bercovich.
The judgment is affirmed.
Preston, J., and Seawell, J., concurred. *351