45 Colo. 168 | Colo. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an action to recover the possession of a “bike sulky.” The only defense is that while the vehicle was in possession of G. C. Kern, under such circumstances as to justify the inference of his own
, The plaintiff, has assigned numerous errors directed to the rulings upon evidence, but these we do not consider of sufficient importance to merit consideration, particularly in our view that there was prejudicial error in the instructions.- After the
In the latter instruction there was manifest error, because there is no evidence at all that plaintiff knowingly permitted Kern to hold himself out to the world as the owner. The instruction is also misleading and defective in that the court failed therein to tell the jury that defendant was not justified in taking the property as a pledge merely because Kern was in possession of it without making further inquiry.
The last part of the first instruction referred to above is wrong, not only for the reason just given as to the second, but also because plaintiff did not occupy such a position with respect to the property, so
Moreover, if Kern, as agent, was empowered by the owner to sell, this would not confer upon the agent authority to pledge it for his own debt. Defendant, however, disavows any claim that Kern was the agent of plaintiff with power to sell. He! only claim is that she supposed Kern was the owner merely because he was in possession. Up to, the time she received the sulky as a pledge she did not, as already stated, know that Kern had represented himself as owner. Kern made no such representation to her, and those which he is said to have made to others as to the horses were not brought to her attention before she" received the sulky as a pledge.
The judgment cannot be sustained. It is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.