Freeman v. Hensley
Freeman v. Hensley
Opinion of the Court
This action, in claim and delivery, was brought by respondent to recover certain horses. The horses in question formerly belonged to one Porter, and were purchased from him by Freeman, October 12, 1889, and were afterward, on October 24, 1889, attached by defendant, as sheriff, as the property of Porter in an action brought by Patterson against Porter and Schell. It is conceded by appellant that there was no actual fraud in the sale of the horses by Porter to Freeman, but he contends that there was no immediate delivery of the property to Freeman, and that the sale was not followed by an actual and continued change of possession, as required by section 3440 of the Civil Code. The cause was tried by the court, and findings and judgment went for plaintiff; and, defendant’s motion for a new trial having been denied, he appeals from the order denying it.
What constitutes an “immediate delivery” and an “actual and continued change of possession” is held to be a question of fact to be determined by the court upon the evidence presented in each particular case: Godchaux v. Mulford, 26
The principal conflict in the evidence as to the manner in which the teams were used at Fletcher’s was in regard to changing horses from one team to another. There was no conflict in the evidence touching the employment of Strimbeck by respondent, nor that he was put in charge of respondent’s horses, nor that Porter did not ask or receive any compensation from Fletcher for the services of Strimbeck or the team driven by him. Little weight should be attached to the fact that prior to this transaction Strimbeck had worked for Porter, and had driven horses owned by Porter and Schell, including the horses in controversy. He had, however, been out of Porter’s employment for some weeks, and during that time was boarding with respondent; The team did not remain at Porter’s, nor was Strimbeck under the control or direction of Porter, but was under the immediate control and direction of Mr. White, the foreman of Mr. Fletcher. I think there was nothing in the temporary change of horses from one team to another, for reasons which probably made each more effective, which should be held to destroy the continuity of the change of possession, especially where it is conceded that the sale was not fraudulent, and where the immediate delivery of the property to respondent was satisfactorily shown; for while it may be true that the burden of showing the actual and continued change of possession was on the plaintiff, and that showing such immediate delivery does not prove the continuance of the change of possession, it nevertheless reflects a light in which the after treatment of the property may properly be viewed by the court. The court did not err in sustaining plaintiff’s objection to the ques
We concur: Temple, C.; Foote, C.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- FREEMAN v. HENSLEY, Sheriff
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Sale—Change of Possession—Evidence.—In an action of claim and delivery against a sheriff for seven horses taken on attachment against plaintiff’s vendor, it appeared that the sale to plaintiff was bona fide, and that there was an “immediate delivery.” The evidence showed that soon after the delivery plaintiff employed a man who had been in the service of his vendor, and put him in charge of the horses; that with six of them in a team he and said vendor, with a like team, did a large amount of plowing for a third person; that while doing the plowing one of the horses of plaintiff’s team was exchanged, for convenience in working, for one of the horses of his vendor’s team. Held, that the evidence supported the finding that there was an “actual and continued change of possession” following the sale of the property to plaintiff. Sale—Change of Possession—Evidence.—In such case, evidence as to whom credit was given for the plowing done by plaintiff’s team is immaterial, in the.absence of an. offer to show that the credit was given by his direction. Sale—Change of Possession—Evidence.—In such case, a witness having testified in chief that he never heard the vendor, during a certain time, make any statement as to the ownership of the property, it was proper to ask him, on cross-examination, if the vendor did not, in a particular conversation during that time, tell him the horses belonged to plaintiff.