202 Wis. 618 | Wis. | 1930
This action was commenced in replevin to recover the possession of certain livestock. The plaintiff gave an undertaking to the sheriff under the provisions of sec. 265.04, Stats., for the delivery to the plaintiff of the stock which was the subject of the replevin action. F. E. Harriman and R. M. Harriman signed this undertaking as sureties. By its terms the sureties undertook that the property would be returned to the defendants if return thereof be adjudged, “and for the payment to him of such sum as may for any cause be recovered against the plaintiff,” as provided by sec. 265.04 of the Statutes. The original judgment provided for a return of the livestock to the defendants, and also for the recovery by the defendants of the plaintiff of a sum in excess of $5,000 on defendants’ counterclaim. This judgment was rendered against the Wisconsin Livestock Association and the Harrimans as sureties on the undertaking, requiring them to pay the amount recovered on the counterclaim as well as the value of the livestock in the event that a return thereof could not be had. The Harrimans did not appeal from this judgment, and it is contended that the judgment entered pursuant to the mandate of this court should, be against the Harrimans for the said sum of $5,000; notwithstanding the fact that this court reversed the judgment rendered upon the counterclaim and ordered the entry of judgment dismissing the same. The contention is that because the Harrimans did not appeal this court could not and did not reverse the judgment as to. them.
Numerous answers may be made to this contention. To begin with, judgment should not have been rendered against the Harrimans on the counterclaim. Judgment was rendered against them no doubt because of the statutory condi
We realize that these observations are somewhat beside the issues presently before us. These considerations standing alone could not relieve the Harrimans of' the judgment rendered against them on the counterclaim in the absence of their appeal from that judgment. What has been said was merely for the purpose of elucidating sec. 265.04 of the Statutes' and to indicate that judgments on counterclaims rendered in replevin actions cannot go against the sureties on the undertaking provided by that section. However, although the Harrimans did not appeal from the original judgment their liability thereon was but secondary, and
Another attack is made upon the judgment because it fails to dispose of certain money which it is claimed is in the custody of the court belonging to the defendants. It appears that when the herd of cattle was condemned as tubercular, certain indemnity moneys were collected by the Wisconsin Livestock Association from the state and federál governments. It has always been conceded tfyat one half of this-money belonged to the defendants by reason of the original contract between them, referred to at length in Wisconsin Livestock Asso. v. Bowerman, 198 Wis. 447, 224 N. W. 729. In the answer and counterclaim of the defendants in
The delivery of the money into court was informal, to say the least. Rule XV of the Circuit Court Rules, which prescribes the formality which shall attend a tender of money into court, was not even attempted to be complied with. Among other things, this rule requires that the party making the tender shall deliver to the opposite party a certificate of the clerk of the court, under the seal of the court, stating the amount of such tender, the time when brought into court, the title of the action, and by what party and under what pleading, or on what account, the same has been so brought in, which certificate before being delivered shall be recorded in the minute book of the court and an indorse
The disposition of this money, or the question of who was entitled to it, was riot in issue. No question concerning the subject was submitted to the jury. We fail to see how it ever came into the custody of the court. The clerk of the court merely became a depositary of the fund. It has never become a fund of the court. It has been held that a clerk of court is not by virtue of his office authorized to receive money as a deposit except by order of the court; that money paid to him without such order may be withdrawn by the depositor at any time before the other party has manifested a willingness to accept it or the court has recognized it as a fund at its disposal, and that in case the money is lost by the clerk, the one making the deposit must sustain the loss instead of the person for whose benefit the money was received. Hammer v. Kaufman, 39 Ill. 87. For full discussion of the subject, see Commercial Inv. Co. v. Peck, 53 Neb. 204, 73 N. W. 452, in which it was held that money paid to a clerk of court during vacation to redeem from a mortgage foreclosure was not good as a tender, never came into the possession of the court, and was held by the clerk of the court as a mere depositary of the person making the payment.
From a review of this record we discover nothing to indicate that this money ever came into the possession of the court or that the court acquired any authority or jurisdiction over it. The trial judge was right in washing his hands
By the Court. — The orders appealed from denying plaintiff’s various motions for the disposition of the fund in the hands of the clerk are affirmed. The judgment appealed from is reversed, and cause remanded with instructions to render judgment in favor of the defendants for the return of the livestock to which it has been determined they are entitled, or for the value thereof in case a return cannot be had. Appellants to recover costs.