50 Wis. 548 | Wis. | 1880
It was insisted on the argument that this action could not be maintained, because, it was said, the evidence shows that the plaintiff was in the undisturbed possession of the goods as receiptor or bailee of the defendant when the suit was instituted, and consequently had no occasion to resort to this remedy. The proposition is doubtless correct, that replevin is a possessory action, brought to obtain possession of specific chattels, in which the plaintiff claims a general or special property, and the right to the possession thereof, and can only be sustained against one who has either actual or constructive possession of the property at the time of the suing out of the writ. This principle, in effect, was so de-
In the language of Mr; Justice Paine: “The same acts which constitute a taking and holding possession by the officer, where he holds goods that are liable to seizure, should be held to be a taking and holding where he seizes the wrong .goods, for .the purposes of a remedy to the owner; and it is
It appears that the goods, when seized by the defendant upon the attachment, were in a store actually occupied by the plaintiff. The testimony shows that the defendant did not take the goods from the store, but “piled them up in one corner,” and claimed that he had possession of them; and he doubtless had constructive if not actual possession of them, and might have maintained an action against one who interfered with or disturbed that possession against his will. But the plaintiff testified on the trial that he gave the defendant a receipt for the goods, and this, it is insisted, pi’eeluded him from bringing an action against the defendant for taking them. What were the terms of the receipt does not appear, as the instrument was not put in evidence. We cannot, however, presume that it contained anything which would estop or preclude the plaintiff from claiming the goods as his own, or from bringing an action to recover possession of them. Indeed, since the defendant did not see fit to put the receipt in evidence, the fair presumption is that it contained nothing which would prevent the plaintiff from recovering the goods, or from resorting to all legal remedies.
In Morse v. Hurd, supra, it was held that the owner of chattels, attached on an action against another, could maintain trespass for them although he had given a receipt in the usual form to the officer making the attachment. Robinson v.
The county court found upon the evidence that the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession of the goods when the action was commenced, and that the defendant unjustly, took and unlawfully detained the same. It is impossible to say that this finding is unsupported by the testimony; for the defendant strenuously insists up to this moment that his seizure of the goods upon the attachment is valid, and that he has the right to hold them as the property of J. J. Williams. Under these circumstances, there is no ground for saying that the defendant had not such possession of the goods, at the time this suit was commenced, that the action could be maintained.
The principal contention in the court below was in regard to the validity of the sale made by J. J. Williams to .the plaintiff. It is said by plaintiff’s counsel that the defendant was in no position to question the Iona fides of that transaction, But by the evidence which the defendant introduced without objection, it was clearly shown that he represented a creditor of the vendor, and came within the rule laid down in
It follows from these views that the judgment of the county court must be affirmed.
By the Gourt.- — -Judgment affirmed.