Porter v. Bucher

98 Cal. 454 | Cal. | 1893

Haynes, J.

This action is in trover for the conversion of hay. The plaintiff appeals from a judgment against her, and from an order denying her motion for a new trial.

Appellant is the wife of Howard B. Porter, with whom she lived upon a farm upon which her husband had duly filed a declaration of homestead, and which farm was principally used for raising hay. The wife was the owner of about one hundred and thirty head of cattle and twenty or thirty horses, which were her separate property, and were kept on the homestead.

The crop of hay for 1888, estimated at about one hundred and twenty tons, was stacked in corrals which had been used for several years for that purpose, aud from which the hay was fed to the stock. After the hay was stacked, plaintiff and her husband went to the stacks, estimated the quantity of hay, agreed upon the price, and the husband, by words, delivered the hay to appellant, who thereupon closed and fastened the gates of the corrals, made a payment of ten dollars thereon, and a few days later made another payment of thirty dollars, and, in accordance with the agreement of sale, assumed the payment of certain specified debts of the husband amounting, with the cash payments, to about eight hundred and seventy dollars, and which debts she afterwards paid.

In October, 1888, the husband filed a petition in insolvency, was thereafter adjudged an insolvent debtor, and defendant Martin became assignee. Shortly thereafter the assignee served a written demand upon the insolvent for the delivery of the hay and other property upon the farm, aud was then informed by appellant of her purchase, aud that the hay belonged to her. The assignee brought an action of replevin agaiust the husband, and took the hay. The taking under the writ was resisted by the appellant, under her claim of ownership, aud after the taking a demand for the hay was duly made, and this action was brought to recover the value of the hay aud special damages.

The cause was tried before the court and a jury, and upon the conclusion of the evidence, the court instructed the jury as follows: —

“Gentlemen of the Jury: The court instructs you first, that *458there is no evidence which will contradict this finding, that the plaintiff entered into a contract, a purchase of certain stacks of hay; that said property was stacked in the corral usually used by H. B. Porter to stack his hay iti; that said property remained there after the sale to the plaintiff in this action by the said H. B. Porter, aud never was removed from the said corral until removed by the officer in this action; that the said premises was the homestead of both parties; that under that state of facts that they used the property apparently as they had before the sale, each assisting the one aud the other in feeding the stock of both parties from the corral, aud that therefore there was not a sufficient change of possession as intended and directed by the law to transfer the title as against a creditor. In view of this statement, I feel called upon, and it is my duty, to instruct you and give you the following instructions: —
“‘ Gentlemen of the Jury: Under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence in this case, a sale of personal property is absolutely void unless accompanied by an immediate delivery, and followed by an actual and a continued change of possession. The evidence is not sufficient to warrant you in finding that there was such delivery and change of possession of the property in controversy in this action, and it is therefore your duty t) find for the defendants, aud you are instructed so to do.’”

The principal question arises upon this instruction. No question was made as to the dona fides of the sale of the hay to appellant, nor as to the fact that she had there, upon the ranch, said cattle aud horses, which were her separate property. Some additional facts appeared in evidence which should be noticed.

Appellant had bought her husband’s hay the preceding year, and fed it from the same “stack corrals,” and in other years had bought hay from others for her stock. Mr. Rod key, a witness for plaintiff, testified that he was employed and paid by Mrs. Porter the winter before to feed her stock, and fed out most of the hay from the same corrals; that in the fall (1888), after haying, she went to Oroville, and was gone a month or six weeks; that she then told witness that the hay (the same here in question) belonged to her; that she was afraid the boy would let the cattle get in and destroy it; that she wanted it to *459feed her cattle, and desired the witness to look after it. Another witness, Mr. Pepperdine, testified that she also informed him of her ownership of the hay, and also requested him to look after it in her absence; that he stayed there a month after the return of plaintiff and her husband, and did not see Porter do anything about the hay. Evidence was also given tending to show that it was the custom in that vicinity for cattle-owners, when they bought hay in the stack, to take their cattle to the hay and feed it there without removing it, and that plaintiff had fed a part of this hay before it was taken by the sheriff under the writ. The instruction given to the jury to find for the defendants was erroneous.

Section 3140 of the Civil Code lays down no new rule as to what shall constitute a delivery. Any delivery that is sufficient to pass the title as between the parties is still sufficient, the statute only adding that it shall be “immediate.” The expression, “ an actual and continued change of possession,” was construed in Stevens v. Irwin, 15 Cal. 503. It was there said; “The word ‘actual* was designed' to exclude the idea of a mere formal change of possession, and the word ‘continued* to exclude the idea of a mere temporary change; but it never was the design of the statute to give such extension of meaning to this phrase, ‘continued change of possession,* as to require, upon a penalty of the forfeiture of the goods, that the vendor should never have any control over or use of them. This construction, if made without exception, would lead to very unjust and very absurd results.”

The supreme court of Pennsylvania said: “In determining the kind of possession necessary to be given, regard must be had not only to the character of the property, but also to the nature of the transaction, the position of the parties, and the intended use of the property.’* (Crawford v. Davis, 99 Pa. St. 578.)

In Byrnes v. Moore, 93 Cal. 394; Claudius v. Aguirre, 89 Cal. 503, and numerous other cases, it is held that what constitutes an immediate delivery and an actual and continued change of possession is a fact to be determined upon the evidence in each p irticnlar case.

We think there was sufficient evidence tending to show such *460delivery and change of possession as to require a submission of those questions to the jury, and such as would have sustained a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.

The cattle and horses were her separate property, returned by her for taxation, and had for years been kept by her upon the homestead. She had before purchased hay from her husband and fed it to her stock from the same stack corrals, had employed and paid Bodkey to feed her stock the preceding winter, and when she was leaving for a visit to Oroville in October, had requested Bodkey and Pepperdine to look after the hay, and see that the cattle did not get into the corrals and destroy it. The stock being hers, and kept upon the ranch where she had the right to'keep them, the presumption was that the hay which was fed to them was hers also. If the ruling of the court below correctly stated the law, it would logically follow that in order to make a valid purchase of hay from her husband, she must immediately remove the hay from the homestead, or buy it from day to day as she fed it to her cattle. If a neighbor had bought this same hay, and according to the custom of that portion of the country, had brought his cattle to the hay, and was there feeding it, no one would contend that it was not sufficient as a delivery and actual and continued change of possession to satisfy the statute. “Either husband or wife may enter into any engagement or transaction with the other, or with any other person, respecting property, which either might if unmarried.....” (Civ. Code, sec. 158.) The code provides no different 'rule as to the formality of such transaction between husband and wife, from that required between strangers; yet the law, giving a reasonable construction to.all such statutes, takes into consideration not only the character of the property, but the relations of the parties and the use of the property intended, and only requires that which would naturally be done in an honest and business-like transaction where there was no thought of fraud or concealment. Indeed, any other course, whilst it might unquestionably fulfill the strictest requirements of the statute touching an actual and continued change of possession, would at once suggest as the reason for such departure an intention to defraud. She was not bound to remove the hay to other land, nor to own the laud upon which the stack stood. *461Ifc was a benefit to the land, in which she as well as her husband was interested, to feed the hay upon it. The hay could not be branded as cattle are, and any unusual notice of her ownership would at once have invited an attack upon the ground of actual fraud; but.the possession of the land was not solely in the husband, and therefore the possession of the hay could not, from the bare fact that it was on the land, be wholly in the husband. At the most, that fact taken alone would have made the possession joint. “ The effect of declaring the homestead was to convert the separate title of the husband into a joint title in himself and wife "to the extent of the homestead.” (Burkett v.Burkett, 78 Cal. 312.) In Barber v. Babel, 36 Cal. 17, after discussing the question whether the declaration of homestead cheated a joint tenancy, the court said: “ But however this may be, there is a joint interest in the homestead — a joint holding, if not a technical joint tenancy.”

The husband had two cows and two horses which were fed from the same hay. Plaintiff testified that by agreement between herself and husband, his cows and horses were to be fel in considération of his services in assisting to feed her stock. This arrangement was not necessarily inconsistent with her ownership and possession, though it was competent evidence tending to show the husband’s possession and control.

Some exceptions were taken to rulings, receiving and excluding oral evidence, but these are not of a character requiring special notice. Evidence of the official character of defendants Bucher and Mark, and that the taking was under a writ of replevin in the case of Martin v. Howard B. Porter was competent, notwithstanding the defect in the complaint in that case.

The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial granted.

Searls, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.

For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order appealed from are reversed, and a new trial granted, McFarland, J., Fitzgerald, J., Garoutte, J.

Hearing in Bank denied.

Beatty, C. J., dissented from the order denying a hearing in Bank.

De Haven, J., did not participate.

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