Rector v. Thompson
Rector v. Thompson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Prior to the death of Emma M. Thompson, she and her husband, O. C. Thompson, were the owners and in possession of certain cattle described in the complaint and in controversy herein. On February 20, 1900, said Emma M. Thompson and her husband executed a bill of sale of the said cattle to their son Sidney Thompson in consideration that said Sidney Thompson should care for them and their two minor children during the lives of the grantors and during the minority of said minors. A short time after the execution of this bill of sale, said Emma M. Thompson died, and her husband, O: C. Thompson, was adjudged non compos mentis. The two minors, with their father, were taken in charge by the plaintiff, a married daughter of said Emma M. and 0. 0. Thompson. On July 16, 1900, plaintiff, upon petition therefor, was appointed administratrix of the estate of Emma M. Thompson, deceased, and guardian of the person and estate of said 0. C. Thompson, non compos mentis. Prior to, and also at the time of, the appointment of plaintiff as administratrix and guardian, as aforesaid, said Sidney Thompson renounced the contract above referred to, and told plaintiff to take possession of the cattle above mentioned, which she did immediately upon her appointment as administratrix. On or about the 7th day of July, 1900, some three months after. Mrs. Rector had taken charge of said cattle, Sidney Thompson, together with the defendant Stock and others, without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff, took the said cattle from the pasture in
At the trial plaintiff offered in evidence, and the court over objection of the defendants admitted', a.letter written by [Reynolds & Stewart, the plaintiff’s attorneys, on July 9, 1900, to defendants Eneeland & Spofford, who-at that timé had possession of the said cattle. This letter: advised said defendants that the 'cattle had been stolen, and that •legal steps would be taken to obtain the ■ same or their value. It is insisted that, because the letter referred to a conversation over the telephone between -the writer and one of sai'd defendants, it was error to admit it,- because the' telephone conversation had already been excluded by the court. The letter was clearly admissible. -The fact that it may have contained irrelevant or incompetent matters would not exclude it as evidence of the facts which plaintiff was entitled to show. The lettex* was evidence of notice to those defendants that the cattle had been stolen, and that steps would be taken to recover the value thereof unless surrendered ■ to the owner. This knowledge and refusal to return the property to the true Owner fix the liability of those defendants.- Cooley, Torts (2d ed.), p. 524 et seq.;-2 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 62; 4 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 112'. - . -
Counsel have assigned as error the refusal of the court to give certain instructions asked by the defendants, and the giving of certain others. This assignment is not argued in the brief except in regard to the questions herein already considered. The instructions given by the court were clear and correct statements of the law relative to the liability of defendants, and the proof required to establish the same, and we shall not discuss this assignment further.
It is insisted that the court erred in refusing to change the place of trial upon defendants’ motion. The defendants Kneeland & Spofford and Stock, at the time the action was commenced and at the time of the trial, were residents of Pierce county. Defendant Thompson was a resi
Finding no error in the record, the cause must be affirmed.
Reavis, C. J., and Fullerton, Anders, Dunbar, White and Hadley, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Minnie Thompson Rector, as Administratrix v. Sidney Thompson
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- CONVERSION-EVIDENCE-ADMISSIBILITY. Iu an action for the conversion of cattle, a letter by plaintiffs attorneys to some of the defendants who had possession of them, that the cattle had been stolen and that steps would be taken to recover their value unless surrendered to the owner, is admissible in evidence to show notice, although containing irrelevant and incompetent matters, which had already been excluded as incompetent. SAME — -LIABILITY OF RECEIVERS OF STOLEN PROPERTY. The fact that the original taking was by one of the defendants who shipped the cattle by rail consigned to himself to be delivered at the stock yards of the other defendants, would not entitle the latter to a non-suit, where they had actual notice that the original taking was wrongful. CHANGE OF VENUE-TIMELINESS OF MOTION. A motion for a change of venue comes too late, where it is interposed at the close of plaintiff’s case, upon the dismissal from the case of the only defendant residing in the county where the trial was had, when there is no showing that such defendant had been made a party in bad faith for the purpose of enabling the venue to be laid in such county, since Bal. Code, § 4856, provides that a defendant entitled to a change of venue must apply therefor “at the time he appears and demurs or answers.”