This is an action of replevin brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover the possession of 150,000 brick of the value of $6.50 per M upon the ground that they had been manufactured from clay belonging to the plaintiff and that the defendant Meisch willfully and wrongfully appropriated said clay. The case was tried upon a stipulation of facts as follows :
“ 1st. That the plaintiff,/A. L. Baker, is the absolute *230owner in fee simple of the north ten acres of lot 3, section-21, township 29, range 9 east, in Dakota county, Nebraska, from and on which the brick in question were manufactured and burned by the defendant, Peter Meisch, Rosa Meisch, and John Marshall, and that the said A. L. Baker has been the owner of said premises since the 25th of June, 1887.
“2d. That the brick in question, as replevied by the-plaintiff from the defendants, aggregated 150,000, and were at that time, and are now, of the value of $6.50 per M brick, and were manufactured by the defendants during the months of June and July, 1888, upon and from the clay and materials of the premises aforesaid then belonging to-the plaintiff.
“3d. That said defendants Meisch and Marshall had entered upon said premises by virtue of a pretended lease from one E. C. Palmer, who never owned or had a right to lease the same; but who claimed to the defendants that he was the owner of the same, and claimed right to the same under the terms of a contract he claimed to have entered into between himself and one J. M. Moan, who was his partner in the real estate business at South Sioux City, Neb., near the land above described, and who claimed to-be the agent of one Edward Croak, a former owner of said premises, and that the said E. C. Palmer had brought an action in the district court of said county against said Croak to compel the specific performance of said alleged contract; which action was begun in May, 1887, and was finally adjudicated and decided in favor of the defendant, the said Edward Croak, and against the plaintiff, E. C. Palmer, on the 18th day of Sept., 1888, the costs having-been paid by the said Palmer and the time for appeal passed, but that the said suit was pending at the time that the brick in question were made by the defendants.
“4th. That at the time the said defendants Meisch and Marshall entered upon said premises, they were notified by *231the owner thereof that the land described did not belong to Palmer, the lessor to them; that the defendants proceeded to manufacture brick thereon, and that on the 29th day of November, 1887, the plaintiff, who was then the owner in fee of said premises, brought an action in the district court of said county against the defendants Meisch and Marshall to enjoin them from further trespassing upon said premises and from manufacturing brick thereon or therefrom, and that on the 29th day of December, 1887, the judge of said court, after hearing the evidence on part of the plaintiff and defendants, made an order enjoining said defendants from further trespassing upon said premises for the purpose of manufacturing brick thereon, which order was duly served upon the defendants.
“ 5th. That said defendants no'Cfegarding said order of injunction, but while it was still pending, willfully proceeded to manufacture the brick in question as aforesaid; that on the 21st day of September, 1888, the defendants made a bill of sale of the brick in question to the defendant, John Arensdorf, which bill of sale plaintiff and defendants are permitted to introduce evidence upon and inquire into the same as though it had not been referred to in this stipulation, the question of the bona fides of the purchase made by the said Arensdorf, and the question of notice to the plaintiff’s rights at the time of purchase being alleged by the defendants and contradicted by the plaintiff herein.
“ 6th. That this action was begun after the date of the alleged bill of sale, and that the proceedings- on the part of the plaintiff in regard to the petition, affidavit, bond, demand on the defendants, and service by summons, and every other needful step has been regular and according to law on the part of the plaintiff and the defendants to this action.”
In the petition for an injunction against the defendants we find the following allegations :
*232“ Comes now the plaintiff and as cause for relief states to the court: 1st. That prior to the 23d day of May, 1887, Edward Croak was the owner in fee of the following described premises, to-wit, the N. 10 acres of lot 3, section 21, township 29, range 9 east, in Dakota county, Nebraska, said land being a strip of uniform width along the north side of said lot.
“ 2d. That on the 23d day of May, 1887, Edward Croak conveyed to E. L. Gilbert all his right, title, and interest in and to the above described premises by warranty deed, which will more fully and at large appear by reference to the records of Dakota county in deed book R, page 37, the said F. L. Gilbert entering into immediate possession of said land and remaining in possession of the same until the 25th day of June, 1887; that on or about the 30th day of May, 1887, the said F. L. Gilbert appointed Eugene R. Sissons as his attorney in fact for the care and management of said land, which power of attorney is a matter of record, as will at large appear by reference to the records of said county in miscellaneous record A, page 383, and that the said Eugene R. Sissons took possession of said land and remained in continuous possession until said Gilbert disposed of the same.
“4th. That on or about the 25th day of June, 1887, F. D. Gilbert, by good and sufficient warranty deed, conveyed to A. L. Baker the lands above described, which deed is recorded in the record of Dakota county, in deed book R, pages 217 and 218, the said A. L. Baker entering into immediate possession, and by his regular appointed agent Eugene R. Sissons has continued in possession up to the present time.
“5th. That on or about the 27th day of June, 1887, an action was begun in the district court of Dakota county to adjust the alleged disputed title to the lands above described, which action is still pending in said court.
“6th. That after the commencement of the aforesaid ac*233tion, and while the said E. L. Gilbert was in possession of said land, Peter Meisch and John or Jean Marshall, without any color of title or show of right, entered upon said lands and erected the fixtures necessary for the manufacture of brick and have dug deep holes and pits in said land, rendering it useless for tilling, residences, and manufacturing, or city purposes, and are otherwise injuring said property, and will continue so to do to the damage of this plaintiff if not enjoined by the court.
“ 7th. That the acts of the defendants in trespassing upon and entering into possession of said land, and digging up the soil thereof, was without the consent of this plaintiff.
“8th. That the said E. L. Gilbert, by his attorney in fact, notified the defendants Meisch and Marshall of said Baker’s title to said premises, while he was the owner of said premises.
“9th. That on or about the 12th day of July, 1887, the plaintiff, A. L. Baker, caused a notice to be served on the defendant, Peter Meisch, notifying him of the said A. L. Baker’s right to the said land, and directing him to refrain from further trespassing upon said premises.”
A restraining order seems to have been granted against the defendants, which was afterwards modified, but we find no undertaking set out in the record as having been given by the plaintiff to the defendants, nor any evidence that one was given.
Section 255 of the Code provides that “No injunction, unless provided by special statute, shall operate until the party obtaining the same shall give an undertaking, executed by one or more sufficient sureties, to be approved by the clerk of the court granting such injunction, in an amount to be fixed by the court or judge allowing the same, to secure to the party enjoined the damages he may sustain, if it be finally decided that the injunction ought not to have been granted.”
Unless such an undertaking was given, a party enjoined, *234except in the special cases provided by statute, of which this is not one, would not be liable for contempt for disregarding the injunction. This, therefore, disposes of the alleged willful violation of the injunction. Where an injunction is disregarded, if an undertaking has been given and approved as required by law, the aggrieved party may, upon filing the proper information under oath with the judge who granted the injunction, have a warrant issued and the party who has violated the injunction arrested and punished for contempt; and he may have this relief promptly upon disobedience of the injunction. If this were not so, the' rights of the party complaining would be liable to injury or destruction. The party obtaining the order, however, must himself be free from fault. In the case at bar there is a finding of the court that the defendants have violated the injunction and a fine of $50 imposed. This judgment was rendered at the same term apparently and but one day preceding the trial of the case of Palmer v. Oroak, and no information upon which the attachment proceedings were predicated, if any such there were, is set out in the record. Had the plaintiff been entirely certain that he was in the right, it is but reasonable to suppose that he would have acted much more promptly.
From the stipulation of facts it appears that Palmer claimed to have purchased the land in controversy from Croak, and that he commenced an action to enforce specific performance of such contract. Neither the pleadings nor proof in that case are before us, so that we have no means of knowing the character of his claim. While that action was pending Palmer made the lease in question to the defendants and the brick in controversy were made before the final determination of that case.
The court will not presume that Palmer had no apparent right to the performance of his alleged contract. The presumption is that he did have such apparent right, and that having the same the defendants acted in good faith in *235taking a lease from him. In other words, Palmer professed to be the owner of the land under his contract, and as such owner he made a lease of a portion of the same to the defendants.
It is conceded in the stipulation that Palmer “claimed to the defendants that he was the owner of the same, and claimed right to the same under the terms of a contract he claimed to have entered into between himself and one J. M. Moan, who was his partner in the real estate business at South Sioux City, Nebraska, near the land above described, and who claimed to be the agent of one Edward Croak, a former owner of said premises, and that the said E. C. Palmer had brought an action in the district court of said county against said Croak.”
There is no claim that the defendants Meisch and Marshall did not believe the statements of Palmer. In fact, a careful reading of the record leads us to infer that they are comparatively ignorant of the nature of titles to real estate and inclined to put implicit reliance in the statements of any person who may have obtained their confidence, and it is evident that there was no willful trespass committed by them on the plaintiff’s land. JThe claim of the — plain(i&therefore, that the defendants willfully, as trespassers, entered upon the plaintiff’s land and manufactured the brick in question from the clay thereon is not sustained bv the _groofi
The general doctrine of accession, and the foundation upon which it rests is, Did the party have, knowledge that he was violating the rights of another and deliberately disregard such rights? This rule is derived from the Civil Law Dig., lib. X, tit. 4, C. 12, § 3.’
As stated by Puffendorf: “ If a man out of willful anfi designed fraud puts a new shape on my matter that he may by this means rob me of it, he neither gains any right over the matter by this act nor can demand of me a reward for *236his labor any more than a thief who digs through my walls can desire to be paid for his great trouble in making a new door into my house.” (Puff., B. 4, C. 7, § 10.)
In Wood’s Institutes, the general rule is stated as follows: “He that made the new species shall be master of the whole if it cannot be reduced to its first state and condition; as when one shall press wine from your grapes, or build a ship from your timber, you cannot claim the wine, or the ship, etc. But this determination only takes place in favor of the workman where the work was designed for his own use, and where he erroneously and by mistake thought the matter was his own. Eor if it was intended for the use of any other, it is his upon the same terms for whose use it was working, and if it is known that the grapes and timber are another’s, and yet thereof he pro-' ceeds to make his wine or ship, he shall lose his labor and workmanship; the whole shall accrue to the owner, and an action may be maintained against him.” (Wood’s Inst. Civil Law, 92; 1 Bell’s Comm., 277, and note (2).)
Where the appropriation of the property of another is accidental, or through mistake of fact, and labor has in good faith been expended upon it which converts it into something entirely different and very greatly increases its value, the original article being comparatively of but little value, the title to the property will be held to pass to the person by whose labor the change has been wrought, and the original owner may recover the value of the article as it was before its conversion.
No doubt the court in a proper case could subject the manufactured article to this payment. No court will confiscate the articles manufactured by another to the owner of the original material unless the facts to justify such confiscation are clearly established, particularly as in this case where the original article was mere clay in the bank.
There is considerable proof as to notice and the good *237faith of the parties purchasing the brick which we do not deem material.
The judgment is right and is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
The other judges concur.