The error assigned by appellant in this case is in the assessment of the amount recovered in favor of the appellee. The answer of the defendant in this case alleged that the cattle in question were kept, held, and detained for the purpose of securing to the defendant (the appellee) the payment of the sum of $220.50, then due for keeping and wintering 300 head of cattle, and that said sum is still due and unpaid. The jury, under the direction of the court, found for the defendant, and assessed the value of the cattle at $10 per head, which amounted to $320; and, the plaintiff having taken possession of the cattle, and nob being able to restore them, the court’s alternative judgment for $320, the value of the cattle, was made effective against the appellant and in favor of the appellee in this case. The judgment recovered exceeded the demand in the answer of defendant by the sum of $99.50. The contention of appellant in this case is that in actions of replevin, where the successful party claims less than a full interest, the value of his interest must be fixed, and the verdict should specify the *123amount of the successful party’s interest; citing Cobbey, Repl, §§ 1072, 1136; Trust Co. vs St. Clair, 34 Mich. 518; Burke vs Birchard, 47 Wis. 35, 1 N. W. 351. In the last-cited case the court said: “Irrespective of any statute, .if it appears that the party recovering in replevin has only a limited or special property in the goods in controversy, the general property being in the other party, the jury should assess only the value of the special interest.” In the case of Guy vs Doak, 47 Kan. 370, 27 Pac. 968, the court said: “It is a universal principle in replevin that where each of the parties has an interest in the property, and the party not having the possession thereof at the time of the trial recovers in the action, he should recover from the other party, as value, only the value of his own special interest in the property, and not the actual value thereof.” Counsel for appellee contends that the cases cited were based on special statutes of the states, which provided the kind of verdict and judgment in replevin; bub that sections 5145 and 5181 of Mansfield’s Digest, which are in force in this jurisdiction, require the jury to return a verdict fixing the value of the property, and the court to enter judgment for that amount, when the property cannot be returned. Section 5181 of Mansfield’s Digest, cited by appellee, and relied on by him, is as follows: “Sec. 5181. In an action to recover the possession of personal property, judgment for plaintiff may be for the delivery of the property, or for the value thereof, in case a delivery can not be had, and damages for the detention. Where the property has been delivered to the plaintiff, and the defendant claims a return thereof, judgment for the defendant may be for the return of the property, or its value, in case a return can not be had, and damages for the taking and withholding of the property.” This section seems to contemplate such a verdict and judgment as were rendered in the case at bar.
*124But it must be construed liberally, so as to promote justice, and not inflict wrong and oppression. The value of the property to be recovered in the case must be the value of the interest which the successful party has in the property. Any other construction would work great injustice in many cases. Suppose, for instance, in the case at bar there had been no agreement on the part of the appellee to release any of the 300 head of cattle which he fed, and upon which he had a lien for feeding, and that the action of replevin had been for the whole number. Their value at $10 per head would have amounted.to $3,000. It would be preposterous to contend that appellee would have been entitled to a judgment for the return of the cattle, and, if they could not be returned, for their value — $3,000. He only claimed an interest in the cattle for feeding them, and a lien to secure the amount of his demand, namely, $220.50. That is all he claimed as due him in his answer, and he could not obtain a judgment in money for a greater sum than he demanded. We fully concur with the supreme court of Missouri in construing a statute similar to that in force in the Indian Territory, in the case of Dilworth vs McKelvy, 30 Mo. 153, wherein that court said: “We are not of opinion that this statute intended the entire value of the property to be assessed, except where the defendant is the absolute owner. Where the defendant has only a special interest in the property, the court or jury should assess the value of that interest. To assess the absolute value in such cases would lead to manifest injustice,” etc. The court below erred in entering a money judgment in the case at bar for a greater amount than was demanded as due to the defendant. If the cattle had been replevied at the expiration of the time fixed in the verbal contract for keeping them, this court would order a remittitur for the amount in excess, and judgment for the amount demanded. But it seems that the contract time for keeping the cattle expired March 1, 1896, and that the 32 head replevied were *125kept by appellee until November thereafter. He was entitled to prove the value of this extra service, and recover therefor. But it appears that he did not claim anything in his answer on this account. This is true. But he was proceeding upon the theory that he was entitled to recover the value of the cattle which he held in his possession, and that the whole value would compensate him for the extra service in keeping the pledged property. He should now be permitted to amend his answer, and set up and prove the value of his services in caring for and feeding the 32 head of cattle in question from March 1, 1896, to the time they were re-plevied, in November thereafter. The contract price for keeping the 300 head during the winter, and the extra compensation for keeping the 32 head from March 1st until they were replevied, constitute his interest in the cattle in question, and that amount should have been found for him by the jury, and fixed in the judgment.
The contention of appellant that the 32 head of cattle retained by appellee could only be held for the amount due on those cattle is untenable. ‘ ‘A delivery of a part of the goods is not a waiver of the lien upon the remainder for the whole freight. The lien is gone upon the part delivered, but remains good upon the part retained for the payment of the entire freight; that upon the goods delivered as well as that upon the goods retained.” 1 Jones, Liens (2nd Ed.) § § 320, 1001. A bailee’s lien for services in respect to chattels, if not discharged or waived, remains attached to whatever part of the property may remain in his possession. A delivery of a part of the property releases the lien upon that part discharged, but does not discharge the part remaining from the burden of the whole lien, unless it was the intention of the parties to do so. Hale, Bailm. & Carr, p 230. In the case at bar there was no waiver of any part of the amount due the appellee when he discharged a portion of *126the cattle, but, on the contrary, appellee contends that the 32 head retained were to be held as security for the amount due on all the cattle which were cared for by appellee. The judgment of the court below is reversed, and a new trial is awarded in accordance with this opinion. Reversed and remanded.
Townsend, J., concurs.