Mueller v. Parcel
Mueller v. Parcel
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of replevin instituted by the plaintiff against the defendants to recover possession of 400 bushels
The facts underlying this controversy are, that defendant William E. Mueller is the owner of a farm in Lincoln county, Nebraska, and that, in the year 1902, J. H. Nagle cultivated a crop of corn on a portion of defendant’s lands for two-fifths of the corn raised on the lands so cultivated; that about the time the corn was gathered he, Nagle, executed. two chattel mortgages on this corn. One of these* mortgages Avas executed to the plaintiff, and the other to one Young, Avho assigned and sold the same to plaintiff before the suit was instituted. Each of these mortgages was given to secure a bona fide indebtedness to the respective mortgagees. It appears that before the com was gathered, defendant William E. Mueller went on a visit to Oregon, and left his property in charge of his Avife. It also appears that defendant Herman Mueller, who is a son of William E. Mueller, entered into a contract with Nagle to gather and crib the corn, and to deliver a certain portion- thereof to plaintiff Parcel, for a consideration named in the contract Avith Nagle. After the corn was gathered, plaintiff demanded possession of the amount covered by his mortgage, and was refused possession by Mrs. Mueller and Herman Mueller, and this suit was instituted, naming all these parties as defendants. They Avere all summoned, and appeared and answered. Defendant William E. Mueller filed a general denial. Mrs. Mueller answered, disclaiming any ownership in the property, and alleging that she held possession of the corn in controversy as agent of her husband. Herman Mueller ansAvered, disclaiming OAvnership, and denying that he had ever had possession of the com as agent of defendant Nagle. Under the issues thus formed, the court, over the defendants’ objection, permitted the plaintiff to allege and prove the contract of Nagle with Herman Mueller to
The action of the trial court, in permitting the plaintiff to plead and prove that Nagle employed defendant Herman Mueller to gather and crib the corn for him, is complained of as having been prejudicial to the interest of defendant William E. Mueller. We think, however, that this testimony Avas properly admitted for the purpose of showing that Nagle, after cultivating the corn, had employed Mueller to gather and crib it, as he, Nagle, was
It is next contended that the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court rendered thereon are fatally defective, and that, for this reason alone, the case should be reversed and remanded. The form of the verdict returned by the jury was as follows: “We, the jury in this case, being duly sworn and impaneled, do find and say that the right to the property and possession of said property when this action was commenced was in plaintiff, and that the value of this right in said property was the sum of 1117.17.” It is contended that this verdict is fatally defective, in that it finds both the right to the property and the right of possession in plaintiff, when he only alleged a special property interest, by virtue of his chattel mortgage, in his affidavit and petition. And we are cited to the case of Hayes v. Slobodny, 54 Neb. 511, as decisive of the question. In Hayes v. Slobodny, as in the case at him, the plaintiff had secured possession of the property on his writ of replevin, and alleged a claim to a special and not a general ownership therein. The verdict in that case was in the following form: “We, the jury, duly sworn and impaneled in the above entitled cause, do find that the right of the property and right of possession of said property when this action was commenced was in the plaintiff and assess his damages in the premises at the sum of one cent.”
In disposing of this case, Ryan, C., speaking for the court, says, “At the time of the trial the replevied property was in his (plaintiff’s) possession, and with reference to that property there was no finding as to the value of his possession as in such cases required by the provisions of section 191 a, code of civil procedure, but the finding in his
While it is always good practice to follow this rule, yet our code does not require it to he followed, where plaintiff prevails in the action and is possessed of the property replevied. In such case, it is only required that the jury by their verdict shall assess adequate damages to the plaintiff for the illegal detention of the property, and for costs. Now, it seems to us, that the general verdict of the. jury, finding the right of property and the right of possession in the plaintiff, should have been construed in the light of the special finding, as a determination by the jury lliat plaintiff was entitled to the possession of the property in dispute as mortgagee, and that the value of his special property was intended to have been determined by the jury at $117.17, the amount of his debt and interest, and that the value of the property was $160. We think
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to the district court to enter a judgment on the verdict of the jury, finding that plaintiff is entitled to the possession of the property replevied, under his mortgage lien, and that the value of his possession was, at the time of the. return of the verdict, $117.17, with interest at 7 per cent, from the date of the verdict, and that he recover his costs.
REVERSED.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.