50 Wis. 360 | Wis. | 1880
This is an action to recover the value of certain personal property which the respondent claims to own, and which, he alleges, was unlawfully taken- and converted by the appellants.
■ The respondent claimed title to the goods by virtue of- a chattel mortgage given to him by one Prank P. Eiley, to secure a debt due to him from said Eiley amounting to the sum of $200 and interest thereon. The evidence clearly shows that Eiley owned the property, and mortgaged the same to the respondent to secure the payment of the said $200. The respondent also claimed that, shortly before the appellants took and converted the property, Eiley had delivered the same to him in satisfaction of the mortgage, and that by such delivery he became the absolute owner of the property at the time it was taken by the appellants. The appellants seized the property on an attachment in favor of the appellant Jane A. Warner against one Samuel D. Potts, who had been in the possession of the mortgaged property for some time previous to the seizure, claiming under Eiley, but subject to the mortgage of the respondent. Potts was the tenant of Jane A. Warner, and the attachment was issued to recover rent due from Potts for the use of the building in which said personal property was kept and used by Potts.
There was no contest as to the dona fides of the claim of the respondent to the property under his mortgage from Eiley. The appellants appear to have relied upon two points as a defense to respondent’s action: First, it was insisted that because the respondent had alleged in his complaint that Eiley
The other point made by the appellants on the trial and in this court is, that the respondent was estopped as to the appellant Jane A. Warner from asserting or claiming that the property in dispute was not the property of Potts, her tenant, at the time the attachment was levied. This is the only affirmative defense set out in the answer. The appellants make no claim in their answer that the mortgage of the respondent was not given in good faith for a valuable consideration, nor that it was given or held with intent to hinder, delay or defraud the creditors of the said Potts. The only evidence offered by the appellants to establish this claim of an
There is certainly nothing in this statement which should prevent Smith from setting up his claim to this property under his mortgage. The appellant’s agent knew, before he accepted Potts as her tenant, that the property which was to be used by him on the premises was to be subject to the respondent’s claim for $200. There is no pretense made by the witness that this claim should be subjected to a prior right of Mrs. Warner to apply the same to the payment of her rent. The witness expressly denies that there was any such understanding between him and Smith. He says: “ I rented Potts the place on the promise of Smith that if Potts did not pay the mortgage he would go back into the place himself.” Taking the statement of the witness Warner as to what was said by Smith to induce him to rent the premises to Potts, as true,
We do not think the record discloses any errors committed upon the trial in the court below.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.