64 N.C. 169 | N.C. | 1870
The plaintiff complained that he was the owner of a certain quantity of corn and fodder, which he had deposited with one Brodie for storage; that in February 1869, Brodie left the premises where the articles were stored, and the defendant took possession, and afterwards refused to deliver them to plaintiff, and thereupon, he demanded judgment for the goods, or the value thereof, with damages. The defendant answered: 1st, That defendant does not detain the said goods 2nd. That plaintiff is not the owner, or entitled to the immediate possession thereof.
The case stated that, on the trial before the jury, it appeared that Brodie rented certain lands from Hyman, for 1868, and employed the plaintiff to work on the farm during the year, agreeing to give him a certain part of the crop as wages; the whole crop was measured, and the part thereof due plaintiff ascertained, but such part was never divided off or separated from the rest, but remained mixed with the rest of the crop, until, and after, 1st July 1869, when the defendant, as the incoming tenant, and purchaser from Brodie of the whole crop, except the quantity demanded by the plaintiff, took possession of the whole.
Upon the trial below, the plaintiff recovered a verdict: Judgment accordingly, and Appeal by the defendant. As there had been no setting apart of the plaintiff's share of the crop, there can be no recovery in this action, which is a substitute for replevin.
They cited 1 Ch. Pl. 163, Wood v. Atkinson,
2. This action is like, but is not governed by the rules in, Replevin; the claim and delivery part is merely incidental, and that part may be set aside, without defeating the action itself: Clark v. Griffith,
Per curiam.
Venire de novo. *134
Cited: Patton v. Hunt,