Dallas v. Hansford

ELLISON, J.

This is an action of replevin for a horse. One of the defendants is an execution debtor and the other is a constable with an execution for $152.72 which he had levied on the horse. The plaintiff gave bond and received possession of the property. She failed in her action, the right to maintain it being in the administrator, and judgment was given for the defendant constable for his interest in the property of $152.72, but there was appended to it a clause “to be levied only of the specific personal property herein-before described.” It seems that on plaintiff’s motion the judgment was modified and that clause omitted. But as modified it gave the constable judgment for the *305recovery of the property “and if plaintiff fails or refuses to deliver said property to said defendant for the period of ten days from December 14, 1907, the defendant constable have the right to take immediate possession thereof, or at his election he, the said Ed Hans-ford, constable, have and recover of the plaintiff and B. Crawford and S. D. Chandler, her said sureties on the replevin bond herein, the sum of $152.72, the amount of said defendant’s interest in said property,” etc.

We can see no substantial difference between the judgment rendered and the one defendant claims should have been rendered, and think it affords slight ground of criticism under the facts disclosed. The ten days time given for a return of the property may not have been justified. But we cannot discover, and nothing has been pointed out, where any substantial harm has been done. The fears expressed by defendant of another action by the administrator cannot be noticed by us. Under the facts of the case so far as they have been disci osed by the record, we see nothing to justify the appeal.

It seems the case has been preserved by bill of exceptions and brought here in that way, yet there does not appear to be a motion for new trial. In view of what we have written, we need not say whether one was necessary. The judgment is affirmed.

All concur.