| Wis. | Jun 15, 1865

Downer, J.

This case has previously been before this court, and is reported 16 Wis., 478" court="Wis." date_filed="1863-01-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/terry-v-allis-6598881?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6598881">16 Wis., 478. At the first trial, the statements in the answer of the defendants were admitted to be true. At the second trial the defendants failed to prove some of the most material allegations of the answer. We think, however, the evidence proved that the order in question was signed by the clerk and mayor and countersigned by the controller, payable to the order of N. Ludwig, and was never delivered to the payee, nor by him endorsed, but was wrongfully taken from the possession of the city, and the name of the payee written in blank thereon, not by him, and without his authority ; in other words, forged. If this be so, then it follows that the city had the right to the possession of the order: and if the order was of any value or could be called property, it was the property of the city. It never having been delivered to or endorsed by the payee, no one could acquire title to it, or such title as to enable hi in to collect its amount of the city.

*34But it was no defense to the action for the defendants to prove that the order "belonged to the city, and that the city had the immediate right of possession. They received the order of the plaintiff, and agreed to return it to him.

Their liability, under the receipt which they gave, if there is any value to the order, is very much like that of a person, who gives a receipt for property attached, promising to return it to the officer: and it has been repeatedly decided in such cases, that it is no defense for the receiptor to allege and prove that the property belonged to a person other than the defendant in the writ of attachment, and that it was not liable to be attached. Clark v. Gaylord, 24 Conn., 484" court="Conn." date_filed="1856-02-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/clark-v-gaylord-6576970?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6576970">24 Conn., 484; Fisher v. Bartlett, 8 Maine, 122; Scott v. Whittimore, 7 Foster, 309. The reason is, that the officer is liable to the true owner. To make out a defense in such case, the receiptor must go one step further. He must aver and prove that the attached property belonged to some person not a party to the writ, and that he had delivered it to, or that it had been taken from-him by, the true owner. Learned v. Bryant, 13 Mass., 224" court="Mass." date_filed="1816-05-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/learned-v-bryant-6404460?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6404460">13 Mass., 224; Sawyer v. Mason. 19 Me., 49; 14 Maine, 414; 2 Robinson (La.), 510, and authorities above cited. The defendants in this case, in their proof, in no way connected themselves with the city so as to make their possession, or the possession of either, that of the city.

No good reason is shown, why the defendants did not return the order to the plaintiff. According to the proof, as between plaintiff and defendants, the plaintiff had the right of possession ; and the defendants having refused to deliver the order to the plaintiff, the judgment of the county court must be affirmed, unless that court adopted an erroneous rule of damages. The county court gave judgment for the plaintiff for thé same amount that it would if the order had been valid and collectable of the city. We think it erred in this, and that the judgment must be reversed. I doubt the correctness of the remark made in the former opinion in this case, that the order could be *35and was of no value to the plaintiff. I think the case was rightly decided when it was here before, for the reason that the statements in the answer, then admitted to be true, showed that the order was in the possession or under the control of the city, and that the right of possession was in the city.

By the Court — Judgment of county court reversed, and a venire ele novo awarded.

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