Gevers v. Farmer

Deemer, J.

January 13, 1896, one T. A. Kelty made a general assignment of his property to one F. IT. Lyman. A part of the property assigned consisted of a stock of liquors. These liquors were covered by a chattel mortgage. Shortly after the assignment the district court of Linn county made an order authorizing the assignee to sell the liquors subject to the chattel mortgage. Pursuant to this order the goods were sold to one William Baehr, who assumed the payment of the mortgage and a. landlord’s lien upon the stock, and paid in addition the sum of one thousand four hundred and seventy dollars in cash therefor. Baehr borrowed the amount of the cash payment from one Snouffer, and to1 secure the repayment of the same, executed a chattel mortgage to O. P. Benjamin, trustee. In this mortgage it was provided that the trustee should take possession of the goods, and receive the proceeds of all sales, *471until the mortgage indebtedness was fully paid. The sale was approved by the court, and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of claims against the assignor. Plaintiff claims that he purchased the goods from Baehr, and that in consideration therefor he agreed to' pay all indebtedness against the stock, of every kind and description, including the mortgage to Benjamin, trustee1, and the further sum of five hundred dollars. The sale .to plaintiff, if one was made, was brought about by reason of an injunction having-issued against Baehr, restraining him from carrying on the liquor business, and, as plaintiff’s counsel say, “in order that the liquors might be sold, and the money realized to pay the indebtedness.” Thereafter certain creditors of Kelty obtained judgments against him, upon which executions issued, that were placed in the hands of the defendant, as marshal of the city of Cedar Rapids. These executions were levied on the stock of liqours, and at the time ofi the commencement of this action the goods were in the possession of the defendant in virtue of his levy thereon. In his petition, plaintiff alleges that he is the absolute and unqualified owner of the goods. This the defendant denied, and he also pleaded that the parties named as having connection with the stock entered into' a conspiracy to obtain possession thereof for the benefit of, and in the interest of, Kelty, in order that his creditors might be hindered and defrauded in the collection of their claims; that the money advanced by Snouffer was in the interest of ' Kelty, and' the title was taken in the name of Baehr as a part of the conspiracy; that plaintiff paid nothing for the stock; that he took the same with full knowledge of the intended fraud, and paid no consideration therefor; that since the commencement of this action plaintiff and Baehr’ have surrendered all claim to the property. The jury found specially that at the time of the commencement of the action plaintiff was not the full and unqualified owner of the property. This statement of the issues and finding of the jury will tend to simplify the questions presented for our consideration.

*472I. Complaint is made of tbe ruling of the- court on a question asked a witness, as to whether he had had any conversation with Kelty about- the making of the. assignment. It is said that this conversation was had after the assignment,. 1 and was therefore immaterial and irrelevant. As the witness simply answered that he had had such a conversation, without stating the details thereof, there was no prejudice; even if the ruling be said to be erroneous.

II.' A witness was' permitted to testify, over plaintiff’s objections, that, just before the making of the assignment, Kelty carried away and secreted some of the liquors, which were added to the stock after Baehr is said to have purchased it. Both plaintiff and Baehr are shown to have-had knowledge of the transaction. Plaintiff claims the raling was erroneous. We do hot agree with him in this 2 contention. It must be remembered that the validity of the assignment is not attacked. If these goods thus spirited away never passed through the assignee, it is difficult to understand how plaintiff obtained title thereto.. And, as he must recover on the strength of his own title, any evidence which tends to show that he did not obtain title to the property, or to some part thereof, was ju-operly received. The evidence was also- admissible on the issue of fraud tendered by the answer.

III. Kelty was allowed to- testify as to. the value of the goods when 'he obtained possession. This witness testified that he had planned that his wife should get the possession of the stock áfter the assignment, and it is shown that she 3 did finally obtain possession. The question was directed to the value of the goods of which Kelty obtained possession after the alleged transfer to Gevers. In view of the- issues tendered and the claims made by plaintiff as to what he agreed to pay for the goods, this evidence was properly admitted.

*473IV. Defendant offered in evidence tbe mortgage wbicb was on tbe goods at tbe time tbe assignment was made. This-mortgage was not attacked by any one, and, as plaintiff 4 and bis vendors all claim tbat tbey assumed and agreed to pay tbis lien, its admission was without -.prejudice.

V. Plaintiff offered to show what finally became of’ tbe stock. As. be gave bond and took possession of tbe property in virtue of bis writ of replevin, tbe final disposition' 5 made of tbe stock was entirely immaterial. There' is no claim tbat defendant received any part thereof. After suit brought, plaintiff could not manufacture* evidence as to bis purpose in obtaining* possession of the-property.

VI. Evidence was adduced, over plaintiff’s objections,, to show Sno-uffer’s knowledge of the arrangement between plaintiff and Kelty with reference to tbe stock. No prejudice resulted from this, evidence, even if it be said to-6 bave been improperly admitted. Tbis- is not an attack. upon the assignment made by Kelty. Tbe claim is-tbat plaintiff never became tbe full and unqualified owner of tbe property. Kelty testified tbat tbe arrangement between him, Baehr, and Gevers was tbat he (Kelty) was to furnish the consideration for tbe purchase of the* stock from -the assignee, and tbat the goods were to be his-as soon as tbe liens against them were discharged. The-evidence objected to was for tbe purpose of showing tbat Sno-uffer bad full knowledge of the arrangement, and that be (Sno-uffer) really -furnished tbe money to- Kelty. Surely such evidence was admissible.

VII. Certain of the instructions are excepted to. Before* considering these, it is well to refer again to- tbe fact that-tbe jury found specially tbat at the- commencement of the* action the plaintiff was not tbe full and unqualified owner * of the property, and also returned a general verdict for* defendant, fixing tbe value of his interest at eight hundred» *474and seventeen dollars and twenty-two- cents, which was the amount of the two executions he held at the time the property was_taken under the writ of replevin, with inter-■ est. 7 There was ample evidence to support the special finding and the general verdict, and, if the instructions relating to ownership are correct, errors in the instructions relating to fraud were without prejudice, and cannot be relied upon for a reversal. Hillebrant v. Green, 93 Iowa, 667; Newell v. Martin, 81 Iowa, 238. As plaintiff alleged that he was the absolute and unqualified owner of the property, he was required to prove it. Proof that he held in it trust for Baehr, -or for Snouffer, or for Benjamin, the mortgagee, or for Kelty, would not be sufficient. Kern v. Wilson, 73 Iowa, 491; Myers v. Townsend, 103 Iowa, 569. Harvard v. Davenport, 105 Iowa, 596, is not in conflict with this rule. In that case plaintiff was the owner, but he had placed a chattel mortgage upon the property. It was held that he was nevertheless the unqualified owner. In this case plaintiff cannot recover because of the fact that he had an interest in the property as trustee. Turning now to the instructions, we find that all those relating to plaintiff’s claim of ownership were 8 correct. After instructing fully as to plaintiff’s claim to the property, and what he must prove in order to recover, the court charged that if plaintiff simply held the goods for the benefit of Benjamin, trustee, of for J. J. Snouffer, then the verdict should be for defendant. The jury evidently found that plaintiff was not the full and unqualified owner of the goods., and, as we have said, the verdict has support in the evidence. The instructions as to fraud do not, as plaintiff contends, relate to fraud in making the assignment, but to- fraud in the subsequent transactions. We quite agree with his counsel in the contention that there is no evidence of fraud in making the assignment, and may further remark that no attack was made upon that.instrument by the defendant. We also agree with plaintiff’s counsel *475in. their claim that, if property was fraudulently omitted from the assignment and secreted by Kelty, it would give the defendant no title to the same. But it must be remembered that plaintiff had the laboring oar, and that he must recover on the strength of his own title, and not on the weakness of his adversary’s. He cannot claim title to property which never passed through the hands of the assignee, and which was not intended to be covered by the instrument of assignment. Instruction 12 relating to the goods that were taken from the building before the assignment and afterwards returned to the stock, even if erroneous, was not prejudicial, for the reason that it is clearly shown that the verdict was not based upon the proposition announced therein. Instruction 9 No. 16 reads as follows: “If you find from the evidence that at this time the plaintiff has no interest in the goods in controversy, and that shortly after the goods in controversy were seized the plaintiff and one Baehr agreed, in consideration of the payment by T. A. Kelty of the balance due to J. J. Snouffer, of twelve hundred and fifty dollars ($1,250), to release to said Kelty all of their right, title., and interest to the property in controversy, and that the said claim of the said Snouffer had been paid by the said Kelty, then and in that event you will find for the defendant.” This instruction is clearly erroneous, but it was wholly without prejudice!, for reasons already stated. Moreover, the general verdict in terms finds that defendant was entitled to the possession of the property at the time it was taken from him; that the value of the property was one thousand two' hundred and fifty dollars, and the value of defendant’s interest therein was eight hundred and seventeen dollars and twenty-two cents. The whole record clearly indicates that the jury found their verdict on the theory that plaintiff never in fact purchased the goods. Lastly, it is insisted that the instructions are inconsistent and contradictory. They are not models, it is true, but, save *476as to those already condemned, they seem to- be consistent and announce correct rules of law.

■The verdict has ample evidence in its support, and we see no reason for interfering with the judgment.— AFFIRMED.