Smith v. Hawley
Smith v. Hawley
Opinion of the Court
In February and March, 1893, the plaintiff delivered 1,610 bushels of wheat at a warehouse in Bushnell, owned by H. S. Murphy, and managed by W. E. Hendricks, his agent. In June, 1893, Murphy having left the country, the plaintiff called upon Hendricks, and demanded his wheat, or the price of it. He was' informed that Hendricks had no money, but that there was about one carload of his wheat in the warehouse. Thereupon, in pursuance of an understanding between the plaintiff and Hendricks, the wheat formerly delivered by the plaintiff, and still remaining in the warehouse, was shipped to Minneapolis in.the name of Hendricks, consigened to C. E. Peck & Co., of Elkton, S. D. The bill of lading was transferred by Peck & Co. to a commission firm in Minneapolis, and in due course of business the net proceeds of the wheat, amounting to $257.77, came into the hands of Peck & Co. or the Elkton Mill
The appeal being from the judgment alone, only errors in law occuring at the trial can be reviewed. As tried below, the material issues were whether plaintiff owned the proceeds of the wheat which came into the hands of Peck & Co. or the Elkton Mill Company, and whether that particular fund was seized by the defendant. Attached to the sheriff’s return in the attachment proceedings against Murphy, introduced in evidence by the plaintiff, was the following notice: “To the Elkton Mill Co.; Take notice that I have this day levied upon all the property in your hands or under your control belonging to the said defendant, H. S. Murphy, and more particularly upon the sum of $93.47 and the sum of $243.57, referred to in your disclosure in the above-entitled action as the proceeds of the sale of two cars of wheat received by you from the agent of the said H. S. Murphy, at Bushnell, S. D., viz. W. E. Hendricks. I make this levy under and by virtue of a warrant of attachment issued in this action on the 26th day of June, 1893, a copy of which was by me served upon you on said day. W. H. Hawley, sheriff of Brookings county, S. D.” The defendant, having been called as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff, was interrogated concerning his return, for the manifest purpose of showing that the money levied upon under the attachment, and subsequently applied.upon the execution, included the proceeds of the wheat claimed by the plaintiff. The witness having stated that
The court’s refusal to give the following instruction is assigned as error: “If you shall find from the evidence that the plaintiff, William H. Smith, delivered the grain mentioned in the complaint to H. S. Murphy, or W. E. Hendricks, his agent, and received in return for the same tickets or tokens of H. S. Murphy, with the price marked thereon, int'ending.'to accept such tickets or tokens as the obligation of said Murphy to pay the price thereon marked for such grain, such transaction would constitute a sale of such grain to said Murphy and in that case the only recourse of said plaintiff would be the personal credit of said Murphy, and he could not recover as against the defendant.” There was no evidence to warrant the submission of'this issue. The following testimony of Hendricks is corroborated, and uncontradicted: “In the month of June, 1893, I wai in Busbnell, engaged in the grain business- — buying grain. I
Having considered all the assignments of error presented by an appeal from the judgment alone, to which attention is called by appellant’s brief, without discovering any reversible error, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Smith v. Hawley, Sheriff
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Plaintiff stored wheat in an elevator and afterwars withdrew a car load thereof, and shipped to a consignee, who sold it for his account. Defendant levied on the proceeds in’ the hands of the consignee as the property of the warehouseman. On a former appeal in the action to recover this money from defendant, it was held that the disclosure of the consignee, who had died before the trial, was not competent evidence against defendant. Plaintiff called defendant to explain an ambiguity in his return of levy, and identify the fund levied on, and, on his statement that he could not tell, without refreshing his memory with such disclosure, was directed to, and, over his own objection, did, examine the same, and then testify to the facts. Held, that the disclosure, though incompetent in itself, was property used to refresh the recollection of the witness, especially as he was adverse to the party calling him, and professed his inability to testify as to an important fact unless his memory was so refreshed. 2. Where, in an action against a sheriff to recover the proceeds of certain wheat levied on in the hands of plaintiff’s consignee as the property of a stranger, the court has charged that plaintiff cannot recover unless the wheat was plaintiff’s, delivered to the consignee for plaintiff’s sole benefit, and the proceeds passed into the consignee’s hands as a special fund for plaintiff, it was not error to refuse to charge that plaintiff could not recover if he sold the wheat to the consignee.