Boot v. Boyd

174 P. 352, 37 Cal. App. 545, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 399
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1566.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 174 P. 352 (Boot v. Boyd) 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
Boot v. Boyd, 174 P. 352, 37 Cal. App. 545, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 399 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HART, J.

Action in claim and delivery, the defendant being the sheriff of Tehama County.

On the ninth day of January, 1915,/R. A. Boot and Nora Boot, his wife, in consideration of $15,642.50, by deed conveyed to plaintiff 170 acres of land in Tehama County, spoken of as the R. A. Boot ranch. On the same day said R. A. and Nora Boot executed to plaintiff a bill of sale conveying certain personal property, consisting of mules, horses, wagons, farming implements, etc., it being stated therein that the consideration named in the above-mentioned deed was also paid for the personal property transferred by the bill of sale.

On the thirteenth day of January, 1915, an action was commenced in the superior court of Tehama County by Jesse A. Brown, as plaintiff, against Robert Boot and James A. Boot, as defendants, to recover $2,691.83, the amount alleged to be due on certain promissory notes given by the defendants in said action in connection with a contract between the parties for the sale by said Brown to defendants of land adjoining the Boot ranch. A writ of attachment was issued and delivered to the sheriff, who made return that, on January 18, 1915, he levied upon certain personal property and also upon the Boot ranch. The court afterward ordered the attachment *547 released as to the personal property, and it was returned to the defendants in said action. On July 7, 1915, judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff, Brown, for $2,691.83; an execution was issued, under which the sheriff levied upon the personal property in question and sold the same for the net sum of $896.95, which money was delivered to the plaintiff in said action.

The present action was brought to secure judgment for the recovery of the possession of said personal property, of for one thousand eight hundred dollars, the value thereof, and for one thousand dollars damages for the alleged wrongful taking of the same. Judgment was in favor of defendant, from which plaintiff prosecutes this appeal,

Appellant states that “but one thing is involved in the action, namely: The validity of the sale, on January 9, 1915, of the property involved, to plaintiff by said Robert A. Boot and his wife. The trial court decided that the sale was invalid because there was no immediate delivery followed by actual and continued change of possession of the property such as is required by section 3440 of the Civil Code, . . . the alleged sale being void as against the execution creditor. ’ ’

It appears from the testimony that plaintiff, Leonard Boot, resided in Glenn County. He stated that he received the bill of sale above referred to on the ninth day of January, 1915; that, with R. A. Boot and James Boot, he went to the R. A., Boot ranch, where the personal property was, checked off each item on the bill of sale, looked at every article on' the ranch, and took possession of it. The property was assessed to him in the year 1915 and he paid the taxes on it. He stated that he authorized all the work that was done on the personal property and paid those who had anything to do with it. On cross-examination he stated that the personal property in question had been on the R. A. Boot ranch and had belonged to R. A. Boot for about two years; that when he took possession of it he did not take any of it away from the ranch, but put Robert (R. A.) Boot in possession of the property as manager and left it in his control. He said that he knew about the transaction in which Robert and James Boot entered into an agreement, about July, 1913, for the purchase from Jesse A. Brown of what was known as the Brown or Westlake ranch, and knew that said Robert and James were indebted to Brown on account of said purchase,. Plaintiff remained ever- *548 night at the Boot ranch, on January 9th, and left there the next afternoon. In a few days he returned, looked over the place, and directed certain work to be done. He testified that thereafter he visited the ranch about once a week; that R. A. Boot conducted the ranch for him, and that he paid said R. A. Boot wages for looking after the property. A few hogs and some fruit raised on the ranch were sold by plaintiff after he received the bill of sale.

Jud. W. Boyd, the defendant, testified that on the 11th of September, 1915, he levied upon and took into his possession the personal property in question; that at that time he found the property in the possession of Robert Boot on the Robert A. Boot ranch and took the property from him; that plaintiff was not there at the time.

Jesse A. Brown testified that in 1914, 1915, and down to September 11, 1915, the personal property was in the possession of Robert Boot; that, when farming Brown’s ranch, Robert and James Boot had the property there and about the 1st of January, 1915, they moved it to the Boot ranch. The witness stated that he was “about the Boot ranch a good deal’’ since the 1st of January, 1915, and that Robert Boot had charge of the property; that he never saw any change of possession of it and never saw Leonard Boot exercise any act of ownership or control over it. On cross-examination the witness said that he had been on the Boot ranch but once since said 1st of January, and that at that time he saw Robert Boot and no one else there; that he had seen him going back and forth and had seen him sitting by the gate one day; that he knew that Leonard Boot claimed the property.

Dan Hamilton testified that, in the summer of 1915, he was employed by Robert Boot to work on the Boot ranch and that he worked there for about three months; that he was there on the 11th of September when the sheriff took the property under the execution; that while witness was on the ranch Robert Boot had charge and control of the personal property; that Leonard Boot was there three or four times but did nothing with the property that witness knew of; that plaintiff worked one day in the dry-yard and he worked picking fruit for the Chinamen a day or two.

Elmer " Oakes, who lived across the road from the Boot ranch, testified that, since the 1st of January, 1915, the prop *549 erty taken by the sheriff had been in the possession o£ Robert and James Boot and that he saw no change in the possession of it during that time. Ray Barker testified to the same facts.

In rebuttal, R. A. Boot testified that during the summer of 1915 he was conducting the ranch for Leonard Boot, who paid all the bills incurred.

The single point submitted here for decision involves an attack upon the finding that there was not an immediate and continuous change of possession of the chattels from the owner to the purported vendee, within the meaning and intent of the law. The case as made by the evidence was one peculiarly Eor the decision of the court, before which it was tried without a jury. In other words, we do not see our way clear to declare, as a matter of law, that there was at any time a change of possession of the chattels involved from R. A. Boot and wife to Leonard Boot. We, therefore, adopt and approve the following portion of the learned trial judge’s opinion rendered and filed in deciding the case, and which is incorporated in the brief of respondent.

“The sheriff as a defense sets up his official capacity, and that as such sheriff he took the property under attachment (execution) in a suit wherein one Jesse A. Brown was plaintiff and Robert Boot and James A.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P. 352, 37 Cal. App. 545, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boot-v-boyd-calctapp-1918.