Parker v. Freeman
Parker v. Freeman
Opinion of the Court
This cause was submitted ex parte for the appellant for failure of the appellee to appear and join in error within the time required by the rules of this court. An examination of the transcript filed, however, fails to disclose any reversible error in the proceedings had below. The action was instituted in the district court by the appellant, Eveline Parker, to recover of Freeman, the appellee, eighteen head of cattle alleged to be owned by her, and unlawfully held and detained by the defendant. All the allegations of the complaint, including ownership and unlawful detention, were denied by the answer. The trial was to a jury, and the evidence was to the following effect: That the plaintiff owned a herd of cattle in La Plata county, in 1881 and 1882, and that she intrusted the entire management and control of the same to her husband, W. C. Parker, who employed herders, made sales of cattle from the herd from time to time, and generally conducted the business as owner. That he hired as herder one Newton Cypret, who, in November, 1881, sold the eighteen head in controversy to Klug & Strausenback, butchers, doing business in Durango, and that they sold the same to the defendant, Freeman. The testimony of the plaintiff and her husband was positive on the point that the herder had no
Affirmed.
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