Opinion of the court by
JUDGE HOBSONReversing.
Appellants recovered1 a judgment in the Bell Circuit Court against E. T. Beilis. They had an execution issued on the judgment, and levied upon a lot of merchandise as-*622his property. Before the sheriff sold the property under the execution, appellee Harkness, under section 645 of the Civil Oode of Practice, executed a claimant’s bond; and thereupon the sheriff surrendered the property, and returned the bond, with his execution, after having the property appraised. Appellants then entered a motion, under section 648 of the Code, for judgment against Harkness and his sureties on the bond. No written pleading was filed, and the court prescribed the ownership of the property as the issue -to be tried, and ruled that the burden of proof was on appellants. To this ruling they excepted, and introduced proof showing, in substance, that the property was in the possession of the execution defendant; that he was then running the store, and had been for some time in possession of the property. Appellants then rested, and on appellee’s motion the court instructed the jury permeptorily to find for the defendants, which was done.
Section 645 of the Code provides: “The sale of personal property upon which an execution is levied shall be suspended at the instance of any person — other than the defendant in the execution — claiming the property who shall execute with one or more sureties sufficient for double its value, a bond to the plaintiff in the execution to the effect that if it shall be adjudged that the property or any part of it is subject to the execution he will pay to the plaintiff the value of the property so subject,” etc. Section 648 pro: vid'es for a judgment on the bond on ten days’ notice, and then adds: “The court shall direct a jury to be empaneled and cause such issue to be tried as it may prescribe and direct which party shall be considered plaintiff in the issues.” This class of proceedings is also regulated by sections- 446-449, regulating the character of the notice, and how the motion may be made; also this: ‘The motion may be heard *623and determined upon or without written pleading, and judgment shall be given according to law and the rules of equity.” Whether the pleadings shall be in writing or not is a question addressed' to the discretion of the court. Couchman’s Adm’r v. Maupin, 78 Ky., 33. By section 526 of the Civil Code of Practice the burden of proof in the whole action lies on the party who would be defeated if no evidence were given on either side. The provision of section 618, above quoted, that the court shall direct, in a case like this, which party shall be considered plaintiff in the issue, must be read in connection with this section. If the pleadings are in writing the court should from them determine who would be defeated in the case if no evidence was offered. Where the pleadings are not in writing, but oral, the court must decide the question in the same way. Eq should require the parties each to state his side of the case to him, and from the statement prescribe what the issue is, and on whom thé burden of proof lies. As the pleadings in this case were oral, and we have no means of knowing upon what the circuit judge acted in ruling the burden of proof to be upon the appellant, we must presume he acted properly. But when appellant had -shown that the sheriff found the property in the possession of the execution defendant, and levied upon it as his property, this, made out a prima facie case, and the burden of proof was-then upon the claimant to show the nature of his claim to the property. Appellant ‘ was not required to show that Barkness did not own the property. The proof of his title-must rest on him. When the claimant relies for title upon an alleged purchase from the execution defendant, the burden of proof in the action is on him; for this defense necessarily admits title in the defendant, and the pre*624sumption is in favor of the continuance of the title in him until the contrary is shown. Ordinarily the burden of proof rests on the party holding the affirmative of an issue, especially where the facts are presumptively within his knowledge. Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.