1. Administrator: taking widow’s property: replevin: capacity of defendant. The defendant moved the court to substitute him as defendant in his representative capacity as administrator. This motion was overruled, and the court did not err in so ruling. The theory of the petition — and thereon the plaintiff ashed to recover . —is that the defendant was a trespasser. This being so, he is personally liable therefor, as is a sheriff who levies on and takes possession of property which the process in his hands does not justify him in doing. The defendant had no right to take the plaintiff’s property because he was the administrator of her husband’s estate.
2. Continuance, absent witness: dismissal of issue. II. The defendant moved the court for a continuance because of the absence of a witness. Thereupon the plaintiff dismissed her claim or right to recover for the horse claimed by her as widow. Thereupon the motion to continue was overruled. This ruling was correct, for the reason that it was shown that the evidence of the absent witness related only to such horse, and had no tendency to establish the remaining issue.
3. Practice on Appeal; verdict: weight of evidence. III. It is contended that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. But we think it is. The jury were warranted in finding that the plaintiff had purchased the horse of her husband during Iris life-time, if the evidence of the plaintiff and her witnesses was true, and this was a question for the jury. We cannot say that there is any such improbability in their evidence as will warrant us in concluding that the jury should have found otherwise.
Complaint is made of an instruction asked and refused in relation to the weight the jury should give to declarations of *499a party, in possession of personal property, in disparagement of his title. Conceding that no well-grounded objection can be made to the instruction, we are clearly of the opinion, under the evidence, that its refusal does not constitute reversible error.
Affirmed.