47 Neb. 667 | Neb. | 1896
This is an action in replevin brought in the district court of York county by John Regier against George W. Shreck and James Powers, the sheriff and a constable of said county. Shreck and Powers had a verdict and judgment, and Regier brings the case here for review.
1. The first assignment of error is that the judgment is excessive. The jury found the value of the interest of the defendants in error in the property to be $975. The court ordered a remittitur of $100, and rendered judgment against the plaintiff in error for $875. The interest of the defendants in error in the property arose from certain executions and olders of attachment which they had levied upon it at the suits of certain creditors of one Gerhard Regier, of whom John Regier claimed to have purchased the property. An examination of the record leads to the conclusion that the amount of the liens which the defendants in error had against this property at the time the judgment was rendered was $833 only, and that the judgment ■ is $42 too large. Counsel for the plaintiff in error insists that this error alone should work an absolute reversal of the judgment; but the doctrine and practice of
2. The second assignment of error is in the following language: (‘The court erred in admitting in evidence the several judgments recovered against Gerhard Regier before Justice Fay.” At least some of the judgments introduced in evidence vere properly admitted, and as the assignment is that the court erred in admitting all the judgments, the assignment, without further examination, will be overruled.
3. The third assignment of error is in the following language: “The court erred in admitting in evidence before the jury the testimony of the witness Halligan, in reference to the affidavits, orders of attachment, and attachment proceed
5. The fifth assignment of error is “errors of law occurring at the trial and duly excepted to.” This assignment is sufficient in a motion for a new trial to challenge the attention of the trial court to any error it may have committed in the admission or rejection of evidence, «but it is too indefinite in a petition in error to enable the supreme court to review anything. -
6. The sixth assignment of error is that the court erred in giving instruction No. 3 on motion of the defendants in error. The instruction is as follows: “To constitute a Iona fide purchaser such purchaser must have parted with something that is valuable upon the faith of his purchase before he had knowledge or .notice of any prior right or equity.” This is the precise language of this court in Gregory v. Whedon, 8 Neb., 373, and the instruction is also supported by the decision of this court in Savage v. Hazard, 11 Neb., 323. The instruction was correct.
7. The seventh assignment relates to an instruction given by the court in the following language: “You are further instructed that if you find from all the circumstances and facts taken together that Gerhard Regier executed and delivered a bill of sale of the property in question to the plaintiff for the purpose of and with the intent of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the creditors of the said Gerhard Regier; and if you further find that the plaintiff had knowledge or notice of such fraudulent intent or design on the part of
8. The eighth assignment of error relates to instruction No. 10 given by the court upon its own motion. The substance of this instruction was that if the jury found for the defendants in error, the measure of their damages would be the aggregate amounts due on the several executions and orders of attachment under which they held possession of the property; not to exceed, however, the value of the property. This was correct.
The defendants in error will have leave to remit $42 from the judgment rendered, as of the date of the judgment, within forty days from this date; and if they do so, the judgment of the district court will be affirmed; otherwise it.will stand reversed.
Judgment accordingly.