American Fruit Growers, Inc. v. Walmstad

260 P. 168, 44 Idaho 786, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 166
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1927
DocketNo. 4627.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 260 P. 168 (American Fruit Growers, Inc. v. Walmstad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Fruit Growers, Inc. v. Walmstad, 260 P. 168, 44 Idaho 786, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 166 (Idaho 1927).

Opinion

*789 ADAIR, Commissioner.

This action was instituted by appellant to recover from respondent 4,000 potato sacks, or the value thereof in case possession could not be obtained. The complaint alleged that appellant was the owner of the sacks; that appellant had made demand on respondent for their return, which had been refused; the value of the property was stated; and it also contained the other usual and necessary averments. In his answer respondent admitted his possession and plaintiff’s demand and his refusal to comply therewith; and by failing to deny he admitted the alleged value, but specifically denied appellant’s right and title to any of said property.

The evidence shows that in the summer of 1922, a corporation, which for brevity we will hereinafter designate as the Equity, and engaged at Wilder, Idaho, in buying and selling farm products, had ordered two cars of sacks, which were to be resold to its patrons for use in shipping potatoes. The Equity, not having available sufficient funds with which to pay for more than one-half carload of sacks, and not being able to unload the shipment as a consequence thereof, procured the appellant to advance money or pay for one and one-half cars of said sacks. A warehouse receipt was issued to appellant by M. A. Rodgers, general manager of the Equity, covering the sacks paid for by appellant, and the sacks were left in storage in the Equity warehouse, with the understanding that it might sell any portion thereof to farmers upon paying over the proceeds from such sales to appellant. Both the Equity and appellant were separately engaged in handling potatoes, and the sale of such sacks facilitated the business of both corporations.

Early in January, 1923, a question arose as to the validity of a warehouse receipt beyond the year of its issue, and the Equity’s manager thereupon issued to appellant a new receipt for the sacks then remaining unsold. It was apparent there would not be a market for the sacks, many of which must be carried over for sale during the ensuing year; and to assist appellant to finance this deal, it was agreed that the *790 Equity should, in addition to the warehouse receipt, make and execute its promissory note to appellant for the value of the unsold sacks. This was done, and a note in the approximate sum of $8,000 was delivered to appellant, which note has since been retained or negotiated, and it has never been surrendered to the maker. The Equity was not the owner or operator of a licensed bonded warehouse under the laws of this state.

These sacks remained in the possession of the Equity until September 1, 1923. On that date the Equity was in serious financial difficulties, and its manager called appellant’s agent on the phone, and advised him to come to Wilder and immediately remove the sacks, since receivership proceedings were imminent, and the creditors of the Equity might levy upon, or attempt to take possession of, this property of appellant’s. The representative of appellant went to Wilder that day, and removed from the Equity warehouse 31.000 of these sacks, that being all that remained unsold, and stored them elsewhere.

Prior to this time a suit had been commenced by one E. E. Heston, a creditor of the Equity, and a writ of attachment issued under which the sheriff attempted to levy upon 4.000 of said sacks while they were still in the Equity warehouse. In his return to the writ the officer certified in part as follows:

“I did on the 2nd day of April, 1923, attach the following described personal property, in the possession of the Wilder Equity Association, viz.: Four Thousand (4000) ‘Calcutta’ grain Bags; and attached the same by taking into my possession and placing a keeper in charge.”

The sheriff was not called as a witness at the trial, and no evidence whatosever was adduced on behalf of respondent to show how this levy was made, other than by the introduction of said return. Positive and uneontradicted testimony of other witnesses shows that on April 2, 1923, the general manager and two of the directors of the Equity were in Caldwell; that, knowing of this suit by Heston, they went to the sheriff’s office, and there the president of this *791 corporation, as such, was served with summons and writ of attachment, this being done, it was stated, to save the expense of the officer going to Wilder to make service of such process. The sheriff then and there appointed F. L. Dickerson, one of the directors present, as keeper of the attached property. Another witness who was, on April 2d, the date the sheriff certifies he made said attachment, in actual charge of the warehouse and place of business of the Equity at Wilder, testified positively that neither the sheriff, his deputies, nor keeper, at any time on that date entered the warehouse, or took possession of any of said property. There is no evidence in the entire record that the sheriff or any representative of his, either before or after that day, ever took possession of these sacks. The property remained in the basement of the warehouse, unsegregated from the mass of 31,000 or more sacks which were covered by appellant’s receipt, and under the exclusive control of the Equity, which corporation was the attachment debtor, until removed by appellant as aforesaid. The removal was accomplished with the express sanction, and on the request and suggestion, of the manager of the Equity. From September 1st to December 20th, these sacks remained in the new warehouse to which they had been taken, and in the exclusive possession and control of appellant or its warehouseman.

Heston, in his suit against the Equity, prosecuted his action to judgment against that corporation. By virtue of said attachment, on December 20th, the sheriff sold 4,000 of these sacks to this respondent. Upon learning of such sale, appellant made demand of respondent for the return of this property, which was refused, and this action was commenced. The cause was tried by the court and a jury, and a verdict was rendered and judgment entered for respondent, from which this appeal is taken.

The only title or right which respondent has to these chattels is that derived from the sale made to him by the sheriff on December 20, 1923. Possession of personal property is indicia of ownership. One in custody of personal effects is presumed to be rightfully in possession until the *792 contrary appears. On December 20th, just prior to the sale, and for months before, appellant was and had been in the open, notorious and exclusive custody, possession and control of these articles of personalty, keeping them in a warehouse of his own selection. Neither the sheriff, keeper, nor even the officers of the Equity had any access to, or dominion over, any of these sacks whatsoever during said period. On that date the sheriff purported to sell them, by virtue of said attachment, to respondent, who was a bidder at the sheriff’s sale.

Of course, if this property actually belonged to appellant, as it contends, at the time of the attempted levy, no service haying been made on it, and it not being a party to the suit in which the attachment issued, appellant would not be divested of title by virtue of such sale, which would be a nullity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 P. 168, 44 Idaho 786, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-fruit-growers-inc-v-walmstad-idaho-1927.