prepared the opinion for the court.
This action was commenced by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant the.sum of $136.65, alleged to> be unlawfully withheld from the plaintiff by the defendant.
The complaint alleges that the defendant was at all of the times therein mentioned sheriff of Gallatin county, Montana; that on or about the 15th day of August, 1899, one Ira D'e Long commenced an action against the plaintiff and one Bert Miche-ner; that in said action a unit of attachment was issued, whereby the defendant garnished $136.65 in the hands of one Yree-land belonging to- the plaintiff; that Vreeland made answer to the garnishment, and prior to the commencement of this action paid the sheriff the said sum; that thereafter, on February 17, 1900, the action was dismissed as to plaintiff, and judgment was rendered against Bert Michener; that the0money so attached was the sole property of the plaintiff; that since February 17, 1900, no action has been pending' against the plaintiff; that prior to the commencement of this action the plaintiff de*243manded the said money of the defendant, who refused to deliver it, but, on the contrary, unlawfully and wrongfully -withheld the same, and has ever since so withheld it. The defendant filed an answer, in which he denied plaintiff’s ownership of the money, and admitted that he refused and still refuses to deliver the same to plaintiff, or any one for him.
The controversy is, to whom does the attached npney belong ? TJpon the admissions in defendant’s answer plaintiff could have made out a prima facie case by testifying to the ownership of the money as alleged in his complaint, and the burden of proof then would have been upon defendant to establish that the money .was the property of some person other than the plaintiff. (Gallick v. Bordeaux, 22 Mont. 470, 56 Pac. 961; Reynolds v. Fitzpatrick, 28 Mont. 170, 72 Pac. 510.) Instead of following the course just indicated, plaintiff undertook to show how he became the owner of the money, and chiefly by witnesses other than himself. It seems that the money was due plaintiff or his brother, Bert Michener, or plaintiff and his brother jointly, on account of lumber furnished for the construction of a bridge for the county across the West Gallatin river. On behalf of the plaintiff one Thorpe testified that he, as surveyor of Gallatin county, had contracted with plaintiff for certain lumber for said bridge, and that he (Thorpe) thereafter substituted one Vreeland in his stead. During his. cross examination Thorpe testified as follows: “I don’t just remember when I had a conversation with Mi’. De Long in the presence of Mr. Brassfield in my oífice. I did not, in a conversation with Mr. De Long and Mr. A. G. Brassfield in my office in Bozeman, Gallatin county, in August, 1889, tell him (De Long) that my dealing in regard to this contract had been with Bert Michener.” Vreeland, who took Thorpe’s place in the construction of the bridge, ratified the contract Thorpe had made with plaintiff, but said he was undecided as to which one of the Micheners furnished the lumber. He paid the money due thereon to the sheriff. In his return to the sheriff upon the garnishment he made this statement : “I hereby acknowledge that I have in *244my possession $136.65 owed by me to tlie sawmill on the West Gallatin river of material by the Micbener Brothers. This amount is in full of all demands of said Michener Brothers on date of September 8, 1899, the date of your service of garnishment. * * * The Michener Brothers above referred to are Thomas Michener and Bert Michener, the defendants in an action wherein Ira De Long was plaintiff and Thomas and Bert Michener were defendants.”
The plaintiff testified that he furnished the lumber to Vree-land, but was not completely paid for it; that he had no other contract with Vreeland, and the latter did not owe him any money other than upon1 such contract for lumber.
The defendant undertook to prove that the money was not the property of plaintiff. To this end he endeavored ■ to show that the sawmill was run by Bert Michener, and the contract for the lumber was made with him. Ira De Long, a witness for defendant, testified that in pursuance of a contract made with Bert Michener he advanced the latter certain money to enable him to get possession of the sawmill from which the lumber was afterwards furnished Vreeland. The arrangement was that De Long was to have his pay out of the proceeds of the ■ mill. As he. said: “I was to get the first money, or the first lumber sawed, whichever it was. * * * I never received sufficient' to reimburse me for what I advanced there at that time. At tlie time this lumber was being sawed there, I saw Thomas Michener working around the mill. He told me, the first time I saw him after I got the mill from Mr. Fletcher, right down here where the old La Clede stands, that he was glad that I helped Bert at the mill, and was satisfied with what Bert agreed to do with me.” He also testified: “I heard Mr.. Thorpe’s testimony this morning as to what he told me in August, 1899, with reference to building that bridge up there. That conversation [was] in his office in this city. In the month of August, 1899, in the presence of A. G. Brassfield, he told me it was Bert Michener who made this arrangement for the lumber that went into the West Gallatin bridge.”
*245Plaintiff moved to strike out all of De Long’s testimony upon tbe following grounds: “It is immaterial and irrelevant to the issues in this case; tha,t it does not tend to show the contract that was entered into, and to which and out of which grew the obligation for which this money was paid; nor does it tend in any manner to show to whom or under what circumstances this money was due, or who is the owner or claimant of it.” The court' sustained the motion. Thereupon defendant offered to prove by the testimony of one Fletcher “that the mill in question, and which sawed the lumber delivered to F. W. Vreeland, and whiehl was used by him in the building of the West Gallatin bridge, and for which the money in question is sought to be recovered, was in the possession of this witness, and that it was taken out of his hands or possession by Ira De Long, who paid the money due upon it for repairs under a contract that the first sawing of lumber of that mill was to be delivered to Mr. De Long until he should be paid the money which he was to advance to this witness, and the expenses of running the mill until he should be fully paid; and that the mill in question was part of this mill, and that the arrangement was made with Bert Miehener.”
Plaintiff objected to the introduction of this proof for the reasons given upon the motion- to strike out De Long’s testimony, and the court sustained the objection. Thereupon the court instructed the jury to find for plaintiff. Defendant preserved his exceptions in a bill duly settled and allowed, and thereupon moved for a new trial, which was denied. The defendant appeals from the judgment. This brings up the bill of exceptions containing the evidence, and the various errors assigned.
The evidence of De Long concerning the conversation with Thorpe in Brassfield’s presence was clearly competent and relevant testimony, and tended directly to contradict Thorpe’s testimony to the effect that he made the contract with plaintiff. That the court committed error in striking out this testimony is too plain to admit of argument. (Code of Civil Procedure, *246Secs. 3379, 3380.) Tbe testimony of De Long and Fletcher should have been submitted to the jury. It tended strongly to show that Bert Michener, and not plaintiff, was the persori who furnished the lumber, and therefore was entitled to the pay therefor. It also tended to show1 that plaintiff knew of the agreement between De Long and Bert Michener, and ratified the transaction between them. These were questions of fact strongly bearing upon the issue in controversy. The court should direct a verdict when the case presents only questions of law, but not otherwise. (Code of Civil Procedure, Sec. 1104.) This court said in Cain v. Gold Mountain Mining Co. 27 Mont. 529, 71 Pac. 1004: “The rule is well established That no cause should ever be withdrawn fromi the jury unless the conclusion from the facts necessarily follows, as a matter of law, that no recovery could be had upon any1 view which could reasonably be drawn from the facts which the evidence tends to establish.’ ”
For the foregoing reasons we are of the opinion that the judgment should be reversed, and] the cause remanded for a new trial.
Per Curiam.For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is reversed, and the cause' is remanded for a new trial.
Me. Justice Holloway, being disqualified, takes, no part in this decision.