OPINION OP THE COURT.
PARKER, J. —This is an action of replevin brought'by the appellants in the Court below against the appellee. It was tried before tbe court, without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the appellee.
It appears that the appellee was Sheriff of Lincoln County, and, as such, levied execution upon some cattle as the property of one E. J. Wood. The defence was that the cattle were not the property of E. J. Wood, but were the property of Mattie M. Wood, the appellant’s vendor. To show the ownership of Mattie M. Wood, appellants offered in evidence a .bill of sale which the court excluded for the reasons set out in his findings, as follows:
“The qfiaintiff attempted to prove that Mattie M. Wood was the owner of these cattle by virtue of a bill of sale which the court ruled out on the ground that the same does not comply with the statute of New Mexico. The statute requires that bills of sale of cattle must be in writing and signed before two witnesses. The plaintiff in this case, having failed to show that Mattie M. Wood was the owner of these cattle in the manner required by law, at the time she executed the bill of sale to the plaintiff, judgment must go for the defendant. The law only provides one manner of transfer of range cattle, that is, by bill of sale conforming to the statute.”
It thus appears that the court held it was necessary, in order to transfer the title to range cattle» in this state, that the bill of sale must be executed and witnessed by two witnesses. In this the court was in error. The section of the statute under which the District Court held that the bill of sale must be witnessed by two witnesses, is section 75, C. L. 1897. This section was enacted as section 11 of chapter 47 of the laws of 1884. The error into which the court fell, no doubt, arose out of an error in the annotations, of the compilers of the Compiled Laws of 1897, in which they cite this section as coming from section 7 of chapter 52, laws of 1897.
1 The law upon the subject of bills of sale of live stock, is section 119, C. L. 1897, which comes from section 15 of chapter 6 of the laws of 1895, and provides an entirely different form in which bills of sale shall be authenticated. It provides that bills of sale of animals shall, instead of being witnessed by two witnesses, be acknowledged by tlie vendor before some officer authorized to take acknowledgments to deeds of conveyance. The act of 1895, being inconsistent with that of 1884, in this regard, operates, of necessity, as a repeal by implication of the earlier provisions. Bills-of sale of sheep must be witnessed. Sec. 166, C. L. 1897.
It follows that the District Court committed error in excluding the bill of sale, and for the reasons stated- the judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to award a new trial- and it is so ordered.