13 Kan. 344 | Kan. | 1874
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action of replevin for twelve head of neat cattle. The defendants in error (plaintiffs below,) replevied the cattle from plaintiff in error, and judgment was rendered in favor' of defendants in error, The petition below was an ordinary petition in replevin, and suf
The defendant, although admitting in his answer that the plaintiffs were the owners of said cattl.e, and that the defendant detained the same from the plaintiffs, also alleged that the detention was not wrongful for the following reasons, to-wit: He alleges that the plaintiffs permitted these twelve head of cattle along with a large number of other cattle belonging to the plaintiffs to enter the .premises of the defendant, and there do a great deal of damage, for which damage the plaintiff claims to have a lien, upon said cattle. (Gen. Stat., 494., § 33; id., 1002, § 3; Laws of 1872, 384, § 3.) And the defendant also alleges that he took said cattle up as estrays. (Gen. Stat., 1003, et seq.) All of the defenses (six in number) in which the foregoing allegations are contained are defective for reasons not necessary now to be stated, except that the defendant does not show by any of said defenses that his case comes within any of the statutes above cited. We think however that the defendant had a right to show, under his general denial, all the facts that he attempted to allege in said six defenses of his answer; (Wilson v. Fuller, 9 Kas., 177, 190;) that is, he had a right to show under his general denial that the plaintiffs were' not entitled to the immediate possession of the cattle, and that the defendant did not wrongfully detain the same, by showing that the cattle broke through a lawful inclosure and entered the defendant’s premises and there did damage, and that the defendant detained them for the purpose of enforcing his lien for the damages; or, by showing that the cattle were strays, and that they entered the defendant’s premises, and that the defendant then took them up as strays. The court below, on objections by'the plaintiffs, refused to permit the defendant to prove the foregoing fact's, or at least the first of the foregoing facts. The question as to what may be proved by a defendant under a general denial in replevin has already been considered and decided by this court. (Town of Leroy v. McConnell, 8 Kas., 273; Wilson v. Fuller, 9 Kas., 177, 190.)
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.