218 Pa. 617 | Pa. | 1907
Opinion by
The verdict in this case was fully justified by the evidence. Under the instructions given them as to what was essential to the plaintiff’s right to recover, the jury found that the plaintiff had acquired title to the goods seized under the attach
If a trespass was committed the jury could not fairly have found that Marcus had not joined in it. D. O. Coughlin, a member of the Luzerne county bar, who represented the appellee at the time the goods were seized, testified that when he spoke to Marcus about the great damage his client would sustain in having the store closed up and offered to make a compromise, the latter replied, that unless all of the debt with costs, both his own and that of his brother-in-law held by him, were paid, he would close up the store. In addition to this, as the learned trial judge in overruling the motion for a new trial very justly says, the conduct of Marcus was such as implied his knowledge of the fact that the constable had been permitted by the sheriff to take the property in execution, for he was present at the time and place of sale and participated in it as a bidder.
Each of the twenty-one. assignments of error has been duly considered, but from no one of them does any error appear, and as to all of them, except the sixteenth, nothing more need be said than that the charge was adequate and correct; the rulings on offers of evidence and on plaintiff’s motion to strike out some which had been admitted, were proper, and the answer to each point was free from error. The case was properly tried in all respects.
The plaintiff’s title to the property seized was the fundamental question for the jury’s consideration. Though it might have been good as between him and his brother, it would not have availed as against the latter’s creditors, if the sale had not been accompanied with change of possession. The learned trial judge in his general charge instructed the jury that to make the transaction good against the creditors of O. R. Rogers there must have been not only a transfer of the title, but of possession of the goods, and that the transfer or change of possession must have been such as the nature of the property and the situation
The assignments are all dismissed and the judgment is affirmed on the opinion of the court overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.