Bunte v. Wilson
Bunte v. Wilson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Bunte & Christensen brought replevin to recover a sawmill and its appurtenances, which had been seized in an attachment suit brought by Davis as a creditor of Cora McLean. For some time prior to January, 1893, the firm had been running this sawmill on Elk creek in Park county, manufacturing lumber for the market. Early in January, Bunte, on behalf of his partnership, entered into negotiations with D. C. McLean, the husband of Cora, looking to the sale of the mill to Mrs. McLean. About the 8th of January, Bunte and McLean went to the locus of the mill, inspected it, and made some arrangement about the sale of the property. What occurred must be stated with some particularity, since the principal point urged on the appeal is there was no evidence to show a transfer of title or a sale of the property to the McLeans. It is insisted the whole thing depends on admissions which do not prove a transfer of title. We are without any evidence of the transaction, except as it is stated b3r Bunte, other than the statements which he made to Davis and the foreman, Elliott, regarding the deal. After the property had been looked over, Bunte stated to Davis that he had sold the property to McLean, who would thereafter operate it. At this time Davis was running a boarding house, keeping the men who were employed about the mill. Davis was told by Bunte he was no longer to work for him, but his arrangement must be made with McLean. This is not an exact statement of the testimony, but it is substantially the effect of it. During this time Elliott, who had been in the employ of the firm, was called out by Bunte and informed that McLean wanted him, and told by Bunte, “I have sold the mill to McLean, and he wants you.” At the same time McLean said to Elliott, “ I have paid a big price for that property, a thousand dollars in all; I will give you three and a half a day to take charge immediately.” Thereupon Elliott
The appellant recognizes the general rule respecting the force of the findings of the trial court on questions of fact where the evidence is in conflict, and in reality does not insist on a reversal of the case because the judgment was against the evidence, but rather on the basis of a lack of evidence to show any transfer of title. With much ingenuity and some logic he attempts to apply the general doctrine that verbal admissions do not constitute pi’oof of a fundamental fact, which must be established in order to enable the suitor to recover. It is insisted that they are always to be received subject to the limitation that the party who produces them is not thereby relieved from the necessity of making the more formal proof of the facts on which his recovery must rest. We do pot appreciate the necessity to enter into a discussion of this nice question, or to indicate what we might hold if the admissions alone were the only matters on which the recovery depended. We discover proof of many other
The case is not brought at all within the exception laid down by the last case, for there is no attempt to show any knowledge brought home to the creditor of the conditional character of the sale, if it was conditional. According to the statements made by Bunte and the apparent situation, on both of which he had a right to reljq Mrs. McLean became the purchaser and owner of the property, and when, on the faith of it, she contracted a debt with Davis, which was unpaid, she had a right to pursue the property and subject it to the payment of the claim. The vendors have no apparent equities. They voluntarily put themselves into the position which imperiled their title, and as between them and the attaching creditor, it is but just they should stand the consequences.
We are not inclined to disturb the findings of the court, and since it concluded the transaction was one of sale rather than of lease, we shall accept that as determinative of the fact, and, being unable to discover any legal error which compels us to disturb the judgment, we shall affirm it.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.