77 N.W. 1001 | N.D. | 1898
The plaintiff, the O. S. Paulson Mercantile Company, is a corporation. As such, it sues the defendant, Seaver, in conversion for the value of a certain stock of goods which was in a store building at Reynolds, in Traill county. It alleges that it was the owner of said stock, and'that the defendant wrongfully seized and converted the same. The defendant, by answer, denies plaintiff’s ownership and damages, and stated that, as sheriff of said Traill county, he seized said stock of merchandise under and by virtue of a writ of attachment duly issued out-of the District Court of said county, and placed in his hands for service, in an action brought by A. L. Shakeman & Company against one O. S. Sletto to recover the value of certain merchandise sold by said Shakeman & Co. to said Sletto; that he seized said stock of goods as the property of said Sletto; and that he, the said Sletto, was in fact the owner of said stock of goods when the same was so seized. A trial resulted in a verdict'for defendant. Subsequently plaintiff moved for a new trial, and one of the grounds of such motion was errors .of law occurring at the trial and excepted to by plaintiff. The Court granted the motion, and the order stated: “The same is hereby granted upon the sole ground of error in law occurring at the trial in admitting in evidence, over the objection of plaintiff’s counsel, certain testimony as to statements made by O. S. Sletto and O. S. Paulson with reference to the ownership of the stock in question.” From this order defendant appeals. To understand the full force of the ruling, it will be necessary to state some facts. The plaintiff corporation received its charter about October 25, 1894. At that time, and for more than a year prior thereto, O. S. Sletto had been conducting a general merchandise business in the City of East Grand Forks, in the State of Minnesota. Commencing on September 10, 1894, and at various dates from that time to October 25th, large quantities of goods were shipped by O. S. Sletto from East Grand Forks, billed to himself at Reynolds. On October 9th and 24th, and on November 2nd and 5th, small shipments were made from East Grand Forks by O. S. Sletto to O. S. Paulson at Reynolds and during the month of October some shipments of goods from wholesale houses were received at Reynolds, billed to O. S. Sletto. All goods received at Reynolds billed to Sletto were taken
We think the order must be sustained, upon the ground that the statements of Sletto, the vendor, made in the ‘absence of the vendee, and tending to defeat the title, were improprly admitted. The general rule which exclrxdes the statements of a vendor, not in possession, and which tend to defeat the title of his vendee, is well established. But the rule has its exceptions. After proof has been introduced to show a fraudulent combination on the part of the vendor' and the vendee to defraud the creditors of the vendor, then the statements of the vendor, in the absence of the vendee, tending to defeat the title of the vendee, may be introduced. Hartman v. Diller, 62 Pa. St. 37; Pier v. Duff, 63 Pa. St. 59; Cuyler v. McCartney, 33 Barb. 165; Boyd v. Jones, 60 Mo. 454; Hutchings v. Castle, 48 Cal. 152. Just how far this precedent proof must go is not clear, under the authorities. In Pier v. Duff the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said: “There is no doubt that if there b.e any, even very
Certain statements were received in evidence that were made by O. S. Sletto after he had executed a bill of sale of the goods in question to O. S. Paulson, and after O. S. Paulson had executed a bill of sale for the same goods to the O. S. Paulson Mercantile Company, the plaintiff herein. Such statements were made in the presence of O. S. Paulson, and were made to the agent of A. L. Shakeman & Co., to whom Sletto was indebted in a large amount, and the agent was seeking to ascertain the extent of Sletto’s responsibility. We must treat these declarations as made in the presence of the corporation plaintiff. O. S. Paulson was at that time president and general manager of such corporation, and as such he was in possession of the stock of goods at Reynolds, and controlled the sale and disposition thereof, and the conduct of the business, as entirely as when it was conducted in the name of O. S. Paulson. Under these circumstances, and in the presence of Paulson, Sletto stated that he was the owner of the stock of goods at Reynolds. In this Paulson,, by his silence, acquiesced. If it were true that the plaintiff owned the stock, the circumstances made it peculiarly incumbent upon Paulson to then and there so declare. If the plaintiff owned such stock of goods, an obligation rested upon Paulson, under the circumstances disclosed, to so declare in response to Sletto’s statement, and he violated every rule of duty and courtesy by not so doing, and the only reasonable inference to be drawn from his silence is an admission by him, for the corporation, of the truth of the statement. In Drury v. Hervey, 126 Mass. 519, it is said that the whole rule turns on the presence or absence of the conditions just enumerated. Here the conditions were all present, and, if Paulson himself were plaintiff, the application of the rule could not be questioned. But corporations, by the silence of those who should speak for them, may make admissions as well as individuals. We
There remain yet the statements made by Paulson himself. They were made on the same day, to the same party. Paulson knew who the party was and what his business was. It would not be possible for a corporation to clothe an officer with more power than the record shows Paulson had in this case. He stated, according to the witness, that Sletto owned the stock at Reynolds, and that he (Paulson) was in there simply to help Sletto out. In his Commentaries on Corporations, Mr. Thompson thus states the rule at section 4914: “It is merely to state the same rule a little differently to say that declarations made by the officers or agents of corporations, while acting in the course of their official duties or of the business of their agency, with reference to the then existing state of affairs, are admissible in evidence as part of the res gestae.” He cites abundant authority for the proposition. The statements made by the president related to a business of which he then had exclusive charge, and referred to the then existing state of affairs. That they were properly received in evidence we have no doubt; but, for the reason already stated, the order of the Court granting a new trial is affirmed.