213 N.W. 950 | S.D. | 1927
This cause is .before us on rehearing. The first opinion is reported in 50 S. D. 230, 209 N. W. 338, and the reader is referred to that opinion for the facts. Appellant’s appeal is based on an assignment that the trial court erred in excluding certain evidence. In our former opinion we did not con
The suit was against the sheriff for an unwarranted .release of attached property. To recover, it was necessary to show a valid attachment. The records and files of the clerk’s office were necessary and competent evidence of a former suit in. which a warrant of attachment was issued and of the proceedings in such action. The particular files offered were those of an attachment action by appellant against C. J. Ellstad and wife, and consisted of the complaint, amended complaint, summons, summons and affidavit in garnishment, affidavit in attachment, undertaking in attachment, warrant of attachment, the return of the sheriff showing service of the several papers in the hands of the sheriff for service, the sheriff’s notice of levy, showing a levy upon one 151-2.5 International tractor (the property claimed to have been unlawfully released), one 3-bottom engine plow, the verdict, two judgments, one against 'C. J. Ellstad and one against Mrs. Ellstad, and an execution upon the judgments, with a return of the sheriff showing no property found to- satisfy them. These files were excluded by the trial court, apparently for the reason that the files were not at all times in the custody of the clerk, but had been in the hands of the attorney for appellant, Max Stokes, for a considerable time prior to their being offered as evidence. The -clerk was called and identified the exhibits offered as files of his office, but on cross-examination it appeared that witness took office on January 1, 1922, and that such files were taken from the clerk’s office prior to his incumbency, in August of the preceding year, and the only reason he gave for his statement that they were files of his office was that they bore the clerk’s stamp, were shown on the register of actions, and a file of his -office showed they had been delivered
The court erred in thus disposing of the case. Respondent's reasons for objecting were too general. The objection that the papers were not filed according to law calls the court’s attention to nothing irregular. The objection that the files were incompetent, immaterial, and irrelevant, and not binding on defendant was without merit; that a file contains conflicting statements does not affect its admissibility.
The clerk identified the exhibits as files of his office. Ordinarily that is all that should be required to lay the foundation for their introduction. If, because the files had been out of the clerk’s office, any further proof of the genuineness of the exhibits as files was wanted, it was the duty of the court to point out what further proof he required, so that appellant could comply with the 'demand, and this court could say whether the trial court abused its discretion in requiring more than the usual foundation.
'The judgment and order appealed from are reversed, and the cause remanded for a retrial.