Bisconer v. Billing

236 P. 329, 71 Cal. App. 779, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 539
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2863.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 236 P. 329 (Bisconer v. Billing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bisconer v. Billing, 236 P. 329, 71 Cal. App. 779, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 539 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiff brought this action against the defendants as sureties on an undertaking executed by them in an action in replevin, in which one J. Tolosano was plaintiff and the plaintiff herein was defendant.

On the first day of March, 1921, said J. Tolosano brought an action in claim and delivery against Raymond Bisconer, the plaintiff herein, for the purpose of recovering the possession of a 25-Sampson sieve grip tractor and a No. 4 12-inch disc plow, said Tolosano claiming and alleging in his complaint that he was the owner of said property and that it was of the value of $2,000'; that in said action of claim and delivery or replevin said Tolosano filed the affidavit required by section 510 of the Code of Civil Procedure, setting forth all the facts required by said section to bo contained therein, and also a notice and demand upon the sheriff of the county of Tulare to take from said Raymond Bisconer, defendant in said action, the property above described; that, at the same time, said Tolosano- executed an undertaking, with F. T. Billing and C. M. Meador, defendants herein, as sureties, in the sum of $4,000; conditioned for the return of said property, or the payment of its value, to said Bisconer in ease it cannot be returned, if a return thereof to Bisconer be adjudged in said action; that said sheriff, in pursuance of said demand, took from said Bisconer said property, and, after retaining possession of the same for five days, no demand by Bisconer that possession of said property be restored to him within that time having been *781 made, the sheriff turned the tractor over to the plaintiff, who thereupon took it to the “Meador ranch,” where Tolosano then resided; that, in the month of December, 1921, the action in claim and delivery was tried, and on the twentieth day of February, 1922, the court rendered judgment in favor- of Bisconer, the defendant therein and plaintiff herein, for the return to him of said tractor and plow, or, in case said property was not returned, for the sum of $2,000, the value thereof. These facts are, with greater amplification, of course, alleged in the complaint herein, and are admitted by the answer, but the defendants, as in avoidance of the legal effect thereof, set up a special defense by way of a plea in estoppel, as follows:

“ . . . that defendants are informed and believe and therefore allege the fact to be that during the pendency of the action in replevin mentioned and alleged in said complaint, and before the entry of judgment therein in favor of the plaintiff and against these defendants as alleged in said complaint, the said plaintiff, Raymond Bisconer, took possession of the personal property mentioned in Paragraph I of plaintiff’s complaint, to-wit, the said No. 25 Sampson Sieve Grip Tractor and one No. 4 twelve-inch Disc Plow, and ever since has retained and does now retain the possession thereof; that by reason of the taking possession of said property by plaintiff as aforesaid, the defendants have been relieved of the obligation of returning said property as provided in the undertaking mentioned and referred to in plaintiff’s complaint, and that by reason of such taking possession by plaintiff the obligation of said undertaking has been fully discharged.”

In response to the special defense or the plea in estoppel so set up, the defendants brought out these facts: That subsequent to the time at which the tractor concerned here was delivered by the sheriff to the possession of Tolosano and prior to the trial and the rendition of judgment in the claim and delivery action, one Harry Crowe, through his attorney, J. W. Wright, who was also attorney for Tolosano in the action in replevin against the plaintiff herein, brought an action against Tolosano and in said action caused a writ of attachment to issue and the same to be levied on said tractor, which was thereupon stored by the sheriff in the warehouse of the Crowe Hardware Company at Tulare; that a *782 short time thereafter said attorney, J. W. Wright, brought in his own behalf an action against Tolosano, and obtained judgment therein and caused execution to be issued thereon and levied on the tractor in dispute; that, at the sale of the tractor under the said writ of execution, said J. W. Wright, first satisfying the judgment in the attachment suit of said Harry Crowe against Tolosano, bought the tractor; that subsequently Wright sold the tractor to one Hugh Pennybaker and gave the latter a bill of sale therefor; that, before, but on the day the sale of the tractor was completed, Bisconer, at Pennybaker’s request, examined- the machine to ascertain whether it was in good condition, and, after the sale was effected, assisted Pennybaker in the removal thereof to the latter’s ranch. As to this circumstance, plaintiff herein testified that in the month of October, 1921, while Pennybaker was negotiating with Wright for the purchase of the tractor, he, at the request of the former, went to the Crowe Warehouse, where the tractor was then stored, to “look over the tractor and examine it as to its condition; that Mr. Penny-baker bought the tractor that day,” paying Wright the sum of $500’ therefor; that Pennybaker then requested plaintiff (Bisconer) to employ someone for him to move the machine to his (Pennybaker’s) farm at Exeter; that Penny-baker gave him (plaintiff herein) $20 to pay the party employed by him for that purpose; that he employed one A1 Bearce “to haul it and saw to the loading of it and paid A1 Bearce the $20 given me by Pennybaker for that purpose.” This testimony by plaintiff was corroborated by Pennybaker. Plaintiff further testified that he bought the tractor at an auction sale conducted by one Pete Robinson and had it in his possession but a few days when it was taken possession of by the sheriff in the replevin suit brought against him by Tolosano; that he had never used it; that, when he examined the tractor at the Crowe Warehouse at the request of Pennybaker, it was covered with dirt; that he had not seen it from about the tenth day of March, 1921, until he saw it at the Crowe Warehouse in October, 1921; that he did not recognize the tractor at the Crowe Warehouse on the last-named date as the one which he had purchased at the auction sale; that,-inasmuch as the claim and delivery suit had not then been tried, he supposed or assumed that the tractor, so purchased by him and which was *783 taken from his possession hy the sheriff under the writ of replevin issued in said action was still in the possession of Tolosano, to whom, as seen, the possession thereof was delivered by the sheriff; that no one had ever informed him that the tractor on sale at the Crowe Warehouse and which Pennybaker bought was the tractor the right to the possession of which was still bound up in the then untried action of claim and delivery by Tolosano against him.

There was received at the trial other testimony than that above referred to, but it was directed only to the identification of the tractor sold by Wright to Pennybaker as the tractor involved in this dispute, as to which, however, there is no serious, if any, controversy between the parties hereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 P. 329, 71 Cal. App. 779, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bisconer-v-billing-calctapp-1925.