Hagar v. Haas
Hagar v. Haas
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action of replevin to recover corn grown upon the premises of D. H. Hagar. On June 27, 1899, Philip Haas, under-sheriff of Jackson county, attempted to levy an attachment on the growing corn as the property of D. H. Hagar. He went through the form of making an appraisement and declaring a levy on the corn, but, did not take possession or control of it, nor exercise any dominion over it, until about the 14th of November of that year.
William Hagar made at least a prima facie showing of the elements essential to a recovery, namely, ownership, right of possession, and wrongful detention. Notwithstanding the fact that the sheriff and under-sheriff failed to show any right to the corn the court directed a verdict in their favor. This was ei’ror. The only justification of the officers for taking and detaining the corn was the order of attachment, and when the attachment proceedings were held to be void and stricken from the testimony, they wei’e shown to be •without any xdght of possession, and their seizure and detention were nothing better than a tx*espass.
No one has appeared here to represent the officers, nor has any argument been made supporting or explaining the decision of the court, but statements are made in the recoi’d indicating that the purchase of the
Nor can the fact that Hagar bid at such sale be treated as a recognition of the validity of the attachment, nor a waiver of his right still further to assert ownership of the property wrongfully detained by the officer. A different phase of the case might arise if some one had been led to purchase at the sale by
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Hagar v. Geo. N. Haas
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. Attachment — Trespass. A seizure of property by an officer under a void attachment is nothing better than a naked trespass, as against a stranger who is in the rightful possession of such property. 2. - Sale of Perishable Property — Owner not JSstovped by Purchase '. In a controversy as to the ownership and right of possession of attached property, the court, during the pendency of an action to recover the same from the attaching officer, ordered it to be sold because it was of a perishable nature, and at such sale the plaintiff became a bidder and purchased the property. Held, that the bid and purchase did not estop plaintiff from further asserting title and right of possession to the property. 3. - Verdict Improperly Ordered by Court. Where the plaintiff makes a prima facie showing of ownership and right of possession of property attached by an officer as the property of another, and the attachment under which the officer justified is ' held to be void, a verdict in favor of the officer cannot be ordered by the court.