Allamong v. Peoples

Gill, J. —

statement. This is an action in replevin for the recovery of three hogs. An abbreviated bill of exceptions states the substance of the evidence as follows: -‘‘Plaintiff to sustain. the issues on his part offered evidence tending to prove his ownership of the property in controversy (describing them) and among a number of facts and circumstances testified to by plaintiff and his witnesses *279tending to show his ownership of the property in controversy, there was evidence tending to prove that the hogs in controversy had been raised by plaintiff, and had strayed from plaintiff’s to defendant’s premises, and that a short time before the suit was instituted they bore the ear marks which plaintiff used to mark his hogs, and that defendant re-marked two of said hogs (the two sows) by cutting off their ears so as to obliterate plaintiff’s mark.

“Defendant, to sustain the issues on his part, offered evidence tending to prove his ownership of the property in controversy, and among a number of facts and circumstances testified to by defendant and his witnesses tending to show his ownership of the hogs in controversy, there was evidence tending to prove that al'l of the hogs, except the large sow, had been raised by defendant on his farm under his constant observation; that the small barrow had been raised as a pet; that the large sow had been bought when a pig by defendant; that the two (2) sows had never borne plaintiff’s mark and had never been- marked at all until a few days before the institution of this suit, when defendant marked them with- his mark.”. On a trial in the circuit court there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff and defendant appealed. The errors complained of relate to the court’s action in giving plaintiff’s instruction number 5 and in refusing defendant’s numbered 1 and 2.

RFns“Sm: ^oía°o!-.°ss: Plaintiff’s fifth instruction told the jury “that if they believe from the evidence that the hogs in controversy bore the ear marks which plaintiff used to mark his hogs within a a short time before this suit was brought, and that defendant re-marked said hogs just prior to the institution of this suit by cutting their ears off so as to obliterate plaintiff’s mark, *280then the jury may take such facts into consideration, along with all the other evidence in the case, in determining the ownership of the hogs.” It is objected that this instruction was erroneous in that it was a comment on the evidence — that it gave undue prominence to one particular fact, thereby leading the jury to ignore other features of the testimony. While this is a reprehensible practice, and while the above quoted instruction may seem at first blush to come within the scope of the rule, we are yet, in this particular case, inclined to treat the error (if error it should be called) as entirely harmless — or rather as giving to a fact in the case no more prominence than it deserved.

The rule is omnia praesumunter contra spoliatorem; all things are presumed against the despoiler; every presumption will be made against a person who destroys or suppresses that which might be evidence against him. If then the hogs bore the ear marks of the plaintiff, and the defendant despoiled these by cutting off the ears of the hogs, then the court was authorized to declare to the jury that this act of spoliation — this destruction of the evidence against him — raised a presumption against the defendant’s case. 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 37. But the destruction did not go that far; it only told the jury that they might “take such facts (if they so found them) into consideration, along with all the other evidence in the case, in determining the ownership of the hogs.” The jury were not advised, as they might have been, that such cutting off the ear marks of the plaintiff was a strong circumstance against the defendant and raised a presumption against his claim.

*281piesump*don°n' tast0ru«ionhip: *280Reversible error was not committed in the court’s refusal to give defendant’s 'first and second instruc*281tions. They merely told the jury that defendant’s possession at the beginning of the suit was prima facie evidence of ownership. These declarations contained a correct proposition of law — that is, that possession of personal property is presumptive evidence of title in the possessor. But in this case the court, .by defendant’s third instruction, gave to the jury all the advice they needed in that direction. They were there in effect told that prima facie the hogs belonged to defendant and that the burden of proof rested on plaintiff to overcome this presumption by a preponderance of evidence.

The ease was fairly tried and the judgment will be affirmed.

All concur.