The Bosserman-Gates Live Stock & Lоan Company, a corporation, brought an action of replevin against the Platte Valley Cattle Company, a corporation, for cattle in the latter’s possession on the ground that the plaintiff had a special property therein of the value of $12,000 by virtue of a chattel mortgage thereof made by R. D. Brown on December 7, 1909, wherein default in the payment of the debt hаd been made. The defendant denied the averments of the plaintiff’s complaint. Two hundred and eighty cattle were taken from the defendant under the writ of replevin and delivered to the plaintiff at the commencement of the action, and the verdict and judgment were that the plaintiff recover 1 cent damages for the detention of these cattle and $924, the value of certain сattle
The defendant offered to prove these facts at the trial: All these cattle had been mortgaged by R. D. Brown to the Welpton Investment Company to secure his debt of $10,000 to that corporation on May 25, 1909, more than six months before the mortgage to the plain-" tiff was given. This mortgage had been duly filed for record оn May 26, 1909. About May 9, 1910, Brown sold these cattle for their full value to the defendant under an agreement between the Welpton Company, Brown, and the defendant that the purchase price realized by the sale should be applied first to the payment of Brown’s mortgage debt to the Welpton Company, and that the remainder only should be paid to him. This agreement was performed. The sum of $12,-700 was duе to the Welpton Company on its mortgage debt. This was paid out of the proceeds of the sale, and the remainder, $400, was paid to Brown. Thereupon the Welpton Company released its mortgage, and Brown made a bill of sale to the defendant. The defendant was in possession of the cattle pursuant to this transaction when this action was commenced and. they were takеn from it under the writ of replevin. An objection to the defendant’s offer to prove these facts was made on the ground that they were incompetent, irrelevant, and improper under the issues. That objection was sustained, and this ruling is the first error assigned.
Estoppel in pais is a creature of equity. But since the decision of the Supreme Court in Dickerson v. Colgrove,
In Reagan v. Aiken,
Dickerson v. Colgrove,
“This is,a possessory action, and the plaintiff, to entitle himself to recover, must have the right of possession; and whatever .takes away the right of possession will deprive him of the remedy- of ejectment. * * * This is the rule laid down by Lord Mansfield in Atkyns v. Hoarde, 1 Burr. 119. ‘Ejectment,’ says he, ‘is a possessory remedy, and only competent where the lessor of the plaintiff may enter, and every plaintiff in ejectment must show a right of possession as well as of irroperty.’ If the plaintiff in the present case was not entitled to possession, how, according to this authority, could he recover? If he had recovered, and a court of equity would have enjoined him from executing the judgment by a writ of possession, we ask, again, how could he recover in this action? Is not the concession that relief could be had in equity fatal to the proposition wе are considering? * * * The reason given for the rule of inurement and estoppel by virtue of conveyances is that it avoids circuity of action. Does not the same consideration apply with equal force in eases of estoppel in pais ? Why is it 'necessary to go into equity in one ease and not in the other? * * * The common law is reason dealing by the light of experience with human affairs. One of its merits is that it has the capacity to reach .the ends of justice by the shortest paths. The passage of a title by inurement and estoppel is its work without the help of legislation. * * * Whether the title passed or not, the fact that the plaintiff was not entitled to possession of the premises was fatal to the action.”
The judgment below will accordingly be reversed, and the case will be remanded to the court below, with instructions to grant a new trial. It is so ordered.
