84 N.W. 359 | N.D. | 1900
Action in conversion to recover the value of a quantity of grain. Plaintiff claims as owner, and alleges that the grain in controversy was raised by her in 1896, and upon land of which she was the owner. Defendants admit the taking, and quantity and value of the grain, but allege as a complete defense that the same was not the property of the plaintiff, but was owned by Albert G. Olson, plaintiff’s husband, and that the same was taken by the defendant O’Connor, as sheriff of Grand Forks county, under and
Counsel for respondents in his brief submits five propositions in support of the order granting a new trial. They are as follows: (i) Error in the admission of certain testimony; (2) error in the failure to charge, amounting to a misdirection; (3) refusing to charge as requested; (4) error in the charge; (5) refusal to direct a verdict. A brief statement of facts is necessary to a consideration of these alleged errors. The grain in controversy was grown in 1896 upon a quarter section of land, which was then, and for five years prior thereto had been, occupied by the plaintiff and her husband as their homestead. The title to the land was in the plaintiff at all times since it was purchased. It was purchased with money derived from the sale of their former homestead. The title to this former homestead was in plaintiff when sold, and for four years prior thereto. Originally the title to it was in her husband. It appears that he transferred the title to her about the time a certain judgment was • rendered against him, in favor of the Sandwich Manufacturing Company, in the District Court of Grand Forks county. On June 23, 1896, the defendant Jones secured the issuance of an execution on said judgment, and in company with a deputy sheriff v-isited plaintiff’s residence and took steps towards making a levy. No levy was made, however. Instead, the defendant Jones and the deputy sheriff induced plaintiff’s husband to accompany them to Grand Forks, and there, at the solicitation of defendant Jones, Olson executed the note and chattel mortgage in. favor of Jones, which have been referred to, as the basis of the claim and delivery proceedings, cpvering the crop their growing upon his wife’s land. The plaintiff was not present when the mortgage was executed. Neither did she authorize or ratify its execution. Olson testifies that he protested against giving the mortgage on the ground that the property was his wife’s, and this is corroborated by the
With these preliminary statements, we turn to the consideration of the errors upon which respondents rely to support the order granting a new trial. The first relates to rulings admitting answers to the following questions propounded to- plaintiff in redirect examination: “(i) Q. For whom did Albert Olson work in 1896? (2) Then you are controlling and running the farm ? (3) Q._Whose grain was it, raised there in i8g6?” And this question asked of Albert G. Olson in his direct examination: (4) Q. You may state who was the owner of the crop?”' The objection to each question was that it was incompetent and called for the conclusion of the witness, and counsel contends that the overruling of such objections was error. The first two of the above questions so. clearly call for statements of facts, and not conclusions, that they do not require extended notice. Plaintiff’s answer that her husband worked for her, and that she rah the farm, was a statement of fact, purely, and in no particular rested upon her opinion or inference. The other two questions call for a direct statement as to the ownership of the grain in controversy. Counsel’s contention is that the answers to these questions were merely expressions of the opinions and conclusions of the witnesses, and were therefore objectionable, and he urges the governing rule that “when ownership is a material and ultimate fact to be determined in an action, and is controverted upon the trial, the witnesses should testify to the principal facts within their knowledge which bear upon such question, and not give their mere opinions and conclusions thereon.” The rule as thus stated by the Court of Appeals of Kansas in Brown v. Bank, 42 Pac. Rep. 593, is in harmony with the current of authority. Farmer v. Brokaw,
The specification of errors as to the instructions may be treated under two heads: The first, failure to charge as requested; the second, error in the instructions given. Counsel for defendants asked the court to instruct the jury that if they found that the transfer of the land by Albert G. Olson to his wife, the plaintiff herein, was made to defeat the claim of the defendant, and that plaintiff had knowledge of such intent, then such transfer was void and conveyed no rights to her, and the defendant would in that event stand in the, same position towards the grain in controversy as though no transfer had been made. Other requests similar in nature were asked. All of them were refused. And we are entirely clear that the court properly refused them, for there are no facts in the case calling for such instructions. In the first place, there never was a transfer of the title of the land on which this crop was grown from
The following instruction given by the court was excepted to by defendants, and specified as error in the motion for new trial: “If from'all the evidence in the case you believe that the plaintiff and her husband conspired togethei' to defeat the payment of this mortgage by claiming that said property belonged to the plaintiff, when in truth and in fact it belonged to her husband, and that he in fact cultivated said land and raised said crop for his own use and benefit, and that he worked said land and raised said crop in his wife’s name in pursuance of such collusive arrangement, then in that event your verdict should be for the defendant.” Respondents’ counsel criticises this portion of the charge as unintelligible, and also claims that it is erroneous. We do not think it is open to either objection. It was applicable to the evidence before the jury for consideration, and states the law entirely favorable to the defendants. If open to criticism at all, it is that it is too' favorable to
The remaining, error relied upon is the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for defendants. The ground of the motion was that plaintiff had failed to show that she was the owner of the grain, or that she was either in possession or entitled to possession. There are two particulars in which defendants claim that plaintiff failed. The first is that the evidence ■ shows conclusively that she was not the owner of the land. This feature of the motion is based wholly upon the theory that the transfer of title by her husband was in fraud of creditors, and therefore void. This, as we have seen, is not tenable, and requires no further notice. The second ground is that the evidence shows conclusively that she did not cultivate the land and raise the crop. We do not so read the evidence. Both plaintiff and her husband testify that the crop was grown under her direction and control. It is true that plaintiff stated that her husband attended to practically all business details, and it appears, also, that he did most of the work on the farm, without compensation other than his living. But the mere fact that he devoted his labor and time to producing the crop, and did this gratuitously, has no legal efficiacy to vest the title of such crop in him. The existence of the marriage relation did not remove the right to manage and control her own property which she had as a single woman. Section 2767, Rev. Codes, provides that “the wife after marriage has with respect to property, contracts and torts the same capacity and rights and is subject to the same liabilities as before marriage. * * *” It is now so well settled that the gratuitious contribution of a husband’s time and skill to the management of his wife’s property creates no title to its profits or increase in him, that the question is no longer debatable. See Heartz v. Klinkham