87 Neb. 542 | Neb. | 1910
The action is replevin and the property in controversy is a sewing-machine alleged to be of the value of $40. Plaintiff did not get the property under the writ, but to recover its value prosecuted the suit to final judgment. The trial resulted in a verdict for defendant, .and from an order of dismissal plaintiff has appealed.
Several rulings in giving or refusing instructions and in admitting or excluding testimony are challenged by plaintiff as erroneous, but defendant argues they should all be disregarded for the reason it is conclusively shown by uncontradicted testimony properly admitted that defendant was not in possession of the sewing-machine when the action was instituted, and that consequently no right to recover existed in favor of plaintiff. There is proof tending to show: Several mosths before the suit was commenced defendant bought the sewing-machine from one who had purchased it from plaintiff. The original purchaser, according to her own testimony, paid the purchase price "to an agent of plaintiff, but the name of the person to whom it was paid was not divulged. Defendant, before plaintiff brought suit or threatened to do so, told one of plaintiff’s agents that he had given the sewingmachin/e to his sister, and that she sold it to Laura MeOapdless, to whom it had been delivered at 120 North TIi ii-f ,--first street, Lincoln, Nebraska, where it could still be found. When the sheriff attempted to serve the writ of replevin, he was informed by defendant that the latter did/not have the property, but was directed where to find it./ Plaintiff did not get possession of the sewing-machine by means of the writ, and the sheriff stated in his return i!mt it could not be found. From proofs of this nature defendant draws the conclusion that plaintiff knew where 4he sewing-machine was, that it could have been taken under the writ, and that plaintiff was not entitled to a verdict, since the property , was not in possession of defendant when he was sued. The writ did not direct the
This is the common-law rule, and the court in applying it recognized the exception announced in Depriest v. McKinstry, 38 Neb. 194, to the effect that replevin is a proper remedy where defendant concealed, removed or disposed of the property for the purpose of avoiding the writ. The exception is about as well established as the rule itself Andrews v. Hoeslich, 47 Wash. 220, 18 L. R. A. n. 1265, and cases collected in note. The statute gives plaintiff in replevin the benefit of the exception. Lininger & Metcalf Co. v. Mills, 29 Neb. 297. Section 186 of the code requires the plaintiff, as a condition of obtaining pos
Is the present case within the exception? The record contains evidence tending to prove: The sewing-machine was manufactured and owned by plaintiff. It was shipped from Chicago to Lincoln, and within a short time disappeared from the storeroom of plaintiff’s Lincoln agency. It was never sold, and plaintiff never parted with the title to it. It was stolen or lost. Defendant was a dealer in second-hand goods at 1450 0 street, Lincoln, Nebraska. For a time the sewing-machine was stored in a barn occupied by one of his employees. Later the employee traded
This instruction disregards any liability arising from the preliminary act of bad faith on part of defendant in concealing the stolen or lost machine at his sister’s residence, or in presenting it to her, for the purpose of avoiding the writ, if such were the fact. The effect of the direction quoted, when considered with the entire charge, was to authorize a verdict in favor of defendant, if the jury found that his sister, at the time she sold the machine, had exclusive possession and control of it, and that in delivering it he acted alone for her. This was a misstatement of the law on a material issue, and it cannot be said to be harmless error.
Not finding it necessary to discuss other rulings • of
Reversed.