By the Court
Flandrau, J.The paper hooks in this ease are so defectively prepared that it is very difficult to spell out the exact state of the pleadings and evidence on the trial. The parties have made up a case, and quite a number of amendments have been proposed and adopted. These amendments refer to the original case, in some instances by blank references to the folios and lines. The case as amended has never been engrossed, and we are left to trace it out as best we may. The proper practice would be to send it back for engrossment before considering it, but the fault must rest with -the attorneys if any misunderstanding of facts results from the state of the papers.
The points upon which the Appellant seeks to reverse the judgment below-are not very numerous, and we will consider them in the order in which they are presented in his brief.
The first is insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, &c. There is an issue of fraud made upon the purchase of the Plaintiff from Mr. Spencer, the original owner of the goods. Upon this issue evidence was given of the fact that the Plaintiff was the clerk of Spencer; that he paid for the property in his note; that he sold portions of it back again to Spencer, and the. articles so sold were endorsed on the Plaintiff’s note as part payment; also the telegram from Spencer to Downing to ship the goods to St. Paul after the sale to the Plaintiff, which may not have been properly admissible, as having been an act of Spencer without the knowledge of the Plaintiff, but which was not offered until after the witness had testified Avithout objection to the fact of his having telegraphed for the goods, and the Avhole contents *100of the telegram. The jury being in possession of the fact, the mere introduction of the telegram would not be error of sufficient importance to vitiate the verdict. This evidence as to the invalidity or fraudulent character of the transfer from Spencer to the Plaintiff was, in our opinion, sufficient to justify a verdict for the Defendant if there was nothing else in the case.
The next point is on the charge of the judge to the jury as to the notice required by ch. 41, Sess. Laws of 1862, p. 98. In the case of Vose v. Stickney, 8 Minn., p. 75, we hold that where personal property was found in the possession of the judgment debtor, who was exercising acts of ownership over it with the consent of the owner, and was seized by the Sheriff upon execution, persons claiming the same could not maintain an action against the sheriff unless they notified him of their claims, • or showed that he had such notice before the seizure. This case was before the statute of 1862, and was decided upon what we conceived to be law uq>on principle and authority. This statute seems to have the same object in view, and is therefore declaratory only. The meaning of section 2 of said act is, that whenever the officer makes the seizure of property in the actual personal possession or custody of the Defendant, under process against him, third parties claiming the same must, before they can maintain an action against the officer, give such officer notice in wilting of their claims to such property, unless the officer possessed at the time of the levy knowledge of the Plaintiff’s claim, and seized the property notwithstanding. It is, however, incumbent on the Plaintiff to show both the notice, when it is given, and the knowledge in the officer, when the Plaintiff relies on that. The statute has no reference to any case except where the property is in the possession of the Defendant at the time of the seizure sufficiently to create presumption of ownership in him.
In the c*se at bar the property was purchased by Spencer abroad, and shipped to him at St. Paul, marked with his name. Now, whether this property was delivered to Mr. Spencer at the place where he purchased it, and by him shipped to St. Paul, or whether he purchased by order, or in what manner, does not *101appear. The goods in controversy were seized in transitu at the city of Red "Wing, where they were in the storehouse of forwarding merchants, on their way to Spencer, marked with his name. These facts, we think, do not make out such a possession in Spencer as was contemplated by the act of 1862, or by the decision above referred to. It is not enough that these facts create a presumption of ownership in Spencer. The officer is protected only when the property is in such actual custody of the judgment debtor as to induce belief of ownership, and he is permitted to take the property in ignorance of the claims of others. The court therefore erred in charging the jury that the Plaintiff could not recover unless the notice mentioned in the statute above referred to had been given before the commencement of the action, because it was predicated upon the assumption that actual possession by the judgment debtor was not essential to the protection of the officer under the statute.
The next point made is up'on the question of value. The complaint states the value of each article taken, and the aggregate of the whole at $980.98. On the trial the Defendant admitted in open court that the value was as alleged in the complaint. The answer denied generally the value of the property, but did not allege what it was worth, and this denial is claimed to be an admission that the value was as charged in the complaint. Upon these facts the court instructed the jury that “ there being no sufficient denial in Defendant’s answer as to the value of the property as stated in the complaint, the jury in this case must find the value of the property tobe $980.98, as stated in the complaint.”
The Appellant now claims that this was error because the several items of value as alleged in regard to each article when added up fall short of the aggregate as also alleged. Now whether this is so in fact or not we have no means of ascertaining except by figuring out the whole matter, as no computation accompanies the point of the Appellant, or whether he knew of this discrepancy at the trial or has discovered it since we do not know except from inference. At any rate it is fan- to suppose he did not know' of it when he drew his complaint, and as nothing was said when *102the question was under discussion, and the charge of the judge was excepted to, about the existence of this discrepancy, we must also presume that the Plaintiff had not then found it out, or he would have placed his objection specifically upon that ground. We cannot presume that he know of it, and put in a general objection as a deception to throw the court off the true ground. The whole question therefore went off on the sufficiency of the denial on the point of value, which, together with the Defendant’s admission of the value in open court made the court’s charge strictly correct. The general objection would not reach such an error of the Plaintiff’s own creation at any rate.
The next and last point is, that the justification fails because the pleadings show that at the tune the execution was issued to Goodhue county, the judgment, which was originally rendered in Ramsey county was not docketed in the former. The answer alleges the rendition of the judgment against Spencer in Ramsey county, on the 14th of July, 1862. That execution thereon was issued on or about the 28th day of November, 1862, to the Sheriff' of Goodhue. That a transcript of the judgment was docketed in Goodhue county on the 1st day of December, 1862. It will be seen that it does not appear absolutely that the execution issued before the docketing of the judgment. The execution issued on or about the 28th day of November, and the judgment was docketed on the 1st of December. Whether an execution issued on the 1st, 2d or 3d of December would not have been admissible under this allegation may wall be questioned. The case says that the “ Defendant offered in evidence the execution issued ujion said judgment as averred in the answer.” No objection was made by the Plaintiff to its reception as evidence, and no copy of it accompanies the case. The first presumption that would arise on this state of facts is, that the Plaintiff, on seeing the execution, found that it bore date after the docketing of the judgment in Goodhue county, and consequently made no objection to its admission, and upon that presumption Ave must determine the point. We do not think an execution can issue regularly to a county until after the judgment is docketed therein, butAve cannot set aside a judgment *103upon such a point unless we are satisfied of the fact upon which the case herein fails essentially.
All that part of the defence depending upon the ordinances of St. Paul and Red Wing against selling liquor without license was ruled in favor of the Plaintiff, and is not involved in this appeal.
We find no substantial error committed on the trial except in relation to the notice required by the act of 1862, and embraced in the Plaintiff’s second point, but for this error the Plaintiff is entitled to a new trial.