23 Utah 354 | Utah | 1901
It is alleged in the first count of the complaint that on the twenty-third day of February, 1899, plaintiff was the owner, in possession and entitled to the possession of certain personal property of the value of $40, and also of an undivided one-half of certain personal property of the value of $1,800, and that on said day the defendants wrongfully took and converted the samé to their own use to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $9.40.
The answer denies each and every allegation of the complaint, and in justification alleges that one Robert McKune and G. ,T. Holladay, on the thirteenth day of June, 1899, were, and for a long time prior thereto had been partners engaged in running the said Clark Hotel, and were the owners and in actual possession of the personal property described in the second paragraph of the first count in plaintiff’s complaint; that on the twelfth day of October, 1898, the said McKune and Holladay being indebted to the Price Trading Company, a corporation, in the sum of $412.52, to secure said indebtedness, with interest at the rate of one per centum per month from the twelfth day of October, 1898, mortgaged said personal property to said company; that on the said thirteenth day of January, 1899, the said McKune and Holladay, turned over to the agent of said company the actual possession of said personal property so mortgaged, and said company, by its said agent, up to and including the sixteenth day of February, 1899, remained in open and notorious possession thereof; that on said day the said defendant C. W. Allred, who was sheriff of said Carbon county, under and by virtue of a decree, duly made and entered on the fifteenth day of-Eebruary, 1899, in the Seventh Judi
The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict was returned in favor of the defendant, and judgment was rendered against the plaintiff for costs.
Sixty-six exceptions were taken and assigned as error by plaintiff. Most of the exceptions taken are too general to be considered, and others are clearly without merit. The exceptions to the instructions given, as appears from the transcript and as interlined, in writing, in the printed abstract, are in this form, “the plaintiff excepts to instructions given by the court, Nos. 16, 17,” and so on, up to and including No. 32. Many exceptions to the reception and admission of testimony are also general. The multiplication of such general exceptions has become quite prevalent, notwithstanding this court has so frequently disapproved the practice.
Among the errors assigned is the overruling of the demurrer to the answer, the ground of which is, that it does not fully appear and can not be ascertained from the answer what property was turned over and delivered by the said McKune and Holladay to the Price Trading Company, on the thirteenth day of January, 1899, or how far around or within what dis
It was alleged in tbe answer that tbe said McKune and Holladay executed and delivered to tbe Price Trading Company, a mortgage of all the personal property described in tbe second paragraph of tbe plaintiff’s first cause of action; that on said day tbe said Price Trading Company, by its agent, took actual possession of said property, tbe same being the property mentioned and described in tbe second paragraph in plaintiff’s first cause of action herein, and up to and including tbe sixteenth day of February, 1899, remained in continuous and open possession thereof.
These allegations, sufficiently advised tbe plaintiff what property was claimed to have been mortgaged, turned over and delivered to the Price Trading Company.
There was no error committed in overruling tbe demurrer. Tbe alleged ownership, possession and right to tbe possession of tbe plaintiff to the personal property set out in tbe complaint is denied by tbe answer, but tbe alleged taking, sale and conversion is admitted by tbe alleged justification under the decree and order of sale set out in tbe answer.
Of tbe property claimed by plaintiff and set out in “Exhibit A” of tbe complaint, and made a part thereof, there was an annexed building, ten pigs, a hogpen and a lumber stable. Neither of these things was covered by tbe mortgage or embraced within tbe decree ordering tbe sale, or by tbe sheriff’s writ. As to that property, tbe taking, sale and conversion was a trespass which was not justified by either the decree or tbe sheriff’s writ, if the plaintiff was, as alleged, tbe owner of a one-half interest in the property, or in possession of tbe same. The plaintiff was not a party to tbe action in which tbe order of sale was made and was not named in tbe sheriff’s writ. An officer is not protected by process where be goes beyond tbe
At the sale, the plaintiff stated to those present that he owned a half interest in the property, and that any one buying the property would do so at- their own risk.
As to the property not included in the order of sale, the purchaser did not acquire any rights under the sale, and his possession and claim of ownership of the whole of said property by virtue of the sale, is a wrongful conversion of the same for which he is liable to the plaintiff, if, as alleged, the plaintiff so owned and possessed said property. Whether such was the case was in issue, and therefore no part of the sixteenth or seventeenth instruction given by the court was correct, and notwithstanding the exceptions to said instructions were general, they should have been sustained. Said instructions are as follows:
“You are instructed as a matter of law that the order of sale issued from this court to the sheriff, and the judgment on which it was founded, justified him in taking possession of the property not claimed by the plaintiff as his individual property, and in selling the interests of the mortgagors to the same and in delivering it to the purchaser, for it is not claimed that the sheriff abused his process. You are further instructed that if you find that the sheriff was justified by his process in selling the property to the purchaser, it follows that all persons who assisted the sheriff were justified, and that the purchaser was justified in taking possession of the property purchased, not properly claimed or demanded by the plaintiff as his individual property, and proved by a preponderance of the evidence to be his individual property.”
The plaintiff only claims to be the owner of a one-half interest in the personal property described in the second clause of the first count of the complaint.
But if the officer assumes to levy on or sell the whole property, his act, as against the co-tenant not named in the writ, is wrongful, and he may be sued for trespass or conversion as the co-tenant may elect. Freeman on Executions, sees. 125, 254, p. 809, and numerous cases cited in n. 2.
In Snell v. Growe, 3 Utah, 26, the court held, that “the interest of one partner in partnership property may be levied upon and sold to satisfy the individual debt of 'such partner, to effect which the whole of the partnership property may be taken in possession of by such officer making the levy; but the levy and sale thereunder must be in recognition of, and as far as possible in harmony with, the rights, of the other partners, and not in hostility thereto; otherwise the officer becomes a trespasser ab initio."
In Murfree on Sheriffs, sec. 933, the rule is stated, thus: “A sale made by a sheriff of the entire property in a chattel owned by two tenants in common under an execution against one of them, is an abuse of his legal authority which renders him a trespasser ah initio. The suit, however, in such case must be brought by the owner who was not defendant in the execution, and not by both of the joint owners.” Smith v.
Section 3236, Revised Statutes, provides that, “When the judgment is .for money or the possession of real or personal property, the same may be enforced by a writ of execution; * * When the judgment requires the sale of property, the same may be enforced by a writ reciting such judgment, or the material parts thereof, and directing the proper officer to execute the judgment by making the sale and applying the proceeds in conformity therewith.
Section 3498, which relates to the foreclosure of mortgages of real and personal property, requires that judgments shall be given adjudging the amount due, etc., the sale of the mortgaged property, and directing the sheriff to proceed and sell the same according to the provisions of law relating to sales on executions.
Section 3258 inquires the sheriff to deliver to the purchaser, upon payment of the purchase money, any personal property sold on execution which is capable of manual delivery, and provides that a certificate of sale issued to the purchaser conveys all the right, title, and interest the debtor had in and to such property on the day the execution was levied.
Under section 3260 the purchaser of real estate likewise only acquires the right, title and claim of the judgment debtor in and to the property sold, at a judicial sale by the sheriff..
■ Under the provisions of the foregoing sections of the Revised Statutes, and the general rule on the subject, in the absence of statutory provisions limiting the rule, as the plaintiff only claims as joint owner of the property mentioned in said second clause of the first count of his complaint, the sheriff, by virtue of the writ of execution, adduced as evidence
The reason of the rule, before adverted to,’ that an officer who, under an execution against one of the co-owners, of personal property, sells in severalty the common property commits a trespass for which he is liable to the co-owner, not a party to the action, under the provisions 'of the Eevised Statutes, does ■not exist, because such a sale 'in severalty by an officer in this State only passes the interest of the judgment debtor, and that interest the officer is authorized to and can only sell; therefore, the rule itself has no application here.
The possession and claim of ownership by the purchaser of said property, under the sale, is not a conversion of the same, even if the joint ownership of the plaintiff were conceded. Cooley on Torts, p. 533, et seq.; 2 Hilliard’s Law of Torts, p. 278, 279 and 280. But his possession and claim of ownership of the property sold, which was not embraced in the decree and writ, is a conversion for which the defendants’ are liable for the damages sustained thereby by the plaintiff, if on a new trial the jury should sustain his claim of possession or ownership in the same, for as to that property in that event nothing passed by the sale, and the seizure and sale thereof was a trespass. Of course, if the plaintiff, as alleged in the answer, neither possessed nor owned the property levied upon and sold, then he has no cause to complain; that, however, is a
It is ordered that the judgment of the court below be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial, and that the respondents’ pay the costs.