Davidhizar v. Elgin Forwarding Co.

173 P. 893, 89 Or. 89, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 95
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 P. 893 (Davidhizar v. Elgin Forwarding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davidhizar v. Elgin Forwarding Co., 173 P. 893, 89 Or. 89, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 95 (Or. 1918).

Opinion

BUBNETT, J. —

Substantially the following facts appear in evidence: On August 26, 1916, Ed Simmons addressed to the Elgin Forwarding Company and signed the following writing:

“We confirm sale to you of about 3,000 bushels F. F. wheat, basis No. 1 Portland grading (or my entire crop of 80 acres, with reservation of 40 bags for seed and feed) at $1.15 per bushel, f. o. b. warehouse, Joseph, Oregon, Elgin Forwarding Co. to furnish bags and sack twine. Delivery as soon as threshed, 1916. Amount advanced $200.00. ’ ’

Afterwards the plaintiff here commenced an action against J. D. Simmons upon a promissory note and caused an attachment writ to be issued and placed in the hands of Edgar Marvin, the sheriff of the county, with directions to attach the wheat in question as the property of the debtor in the writ. With the writ in his possession the sheriff met Ed Simmons' on his way to Joseph with some of the wheat loaded on wagons, and told him that the wheat was attached and to take it to the Elgin Forwarding Company and have it stored in the name of Edgar Marvin. The officer also made arrangement with Ed Simmons to haul in the rest of the crop and deliver it to the defendant to be stored in Marvin’s name. At the same time the sheriff wrote and sent to the defendant by Simmons the following message:

“Enterprise, Ore., Oct. 31, 1916.
“Elgin Ford. Co.,
‘ ‘ This grain is under attachment and you will please accept it in my name; 2 loads today 70 sacks, and all other that they will haul this week.
“Edgar Marvin/*

[93]*931. In pursuance of this arrangement the defendant' accepted from Ed Simmons the two loads mentioned in the writing just quoted, and the balance of the crop in question remaining on the farm, and issued to Marvin receipts covering the same in the usual warehouse form.

Still later Ed Simmons commenced the action of replevin against the sheriff and recovered the usual alternative judgment, the value being assessed at $1,328. Soon after the rendition of this alternative judgment in favor of Simmons against Marvin the latter paid the money value thereby assessed and Simmons by his attorneys accepted the same and satisfied the judgment in full, entering upon the margin of the record of the judgment the following writing:

“State of Oregon,
County of “Wallowa, — ss.
“January 6, 1917.
“In consideration of the payment of the within judgment full and complete satisfaction of the within judgment is hereby acknowledged.”
This was signed by one of the attorneys for Ed Simmons and attested by the county clerk. The satisfaction of the judgment was within the authority of the attorney under Section 1083, L. O. L., reading thus:
“An attorney has authority, * *
“2. To receive money or property claimed by his client in an action, suit, or proceeding, during the pendency thereof, or within three years after judgment or decree, and upon the payment or delivery thereof, and not otherwise, to discharge the claim or acknowledge satisfaction of the judgment or decree.”

2. The evidence is ample that Simmons accepted the money and applied it to payment of his own obligations, having knowledge of all the facts and transactions from which the money was derived. This [94]*94amounts to a ratification of the discharge of the judgment independent of the attorney’s statutory authority. The operation of this transaction was to transfer the title to Marvin.

The plaintiff here furnished the money with which Marvin satisfied the judgment and the latter indorsed to him the warehouse receipts which the defendant had issued. The plaintiff then presented these receipts to the defendant and demanded possession of the wheat represented thereby. The latter refused to surrender the grain and Davidhizar brought this action resulting in the alternative judgment in his favor against the Elgin Forwarding Company involved in this appeal.

3. In effect both parties attempt to deraign title from Ed Simmons. The writing upon which the defendant relies, considered most favorably for its contention, is not more than an executory contract that does not pass any present title and will not support replevin: Hubler v. Gaston, 9 Or. 66 (42 Am. Rep. 794); Rosenthal v. Kahn, 19 Or. 571 (24 Pac. 989); Hamilton v. Gordon, 22 Or. 560 (30 Pac. 495); La Vie v. Crobsy, 43 Or. 612 (74 Pac. 220); Gile & Co. v. Laselle, post, p. 107 (172 Pac. 741). Under this instrument the defendant had no title to the wheat and it was competent for Ed Simmons to transfer the title to any third person, incurring the risk, of course, of an action of damages by the Elgin Forwarding Company for breach of his executory contract.

4. Much has been said in the briefs and argument about the invalidity of the attachment, the claim being that when property is found in the hands of a third person it shall be attached by leaving a notice of garnishment with that individual and hence that the act of the sheriff in taking possession of the property from Ed Simmons under a writ of attachment against J. D. [95]*95Simmons was void and inoperative. The attachment, however, is not the vital factor in the case. So far as that is concerned it is immaterial whether Marvin took the property under the forms of law, as by attachment, or by force without the consent of Simmons. The title to the property as between Simmons and Marvin is to be determined by the legal effect of the satisfaction of the judgment which the former recovered against the latter. Simmons, who was in the rightful possession and ownership of the property when the sheriff took custody of it, had a right to maintain replevin for it. Having recovered the usual alternative judgment, it was within the power of Simmons and Marvin to make such composition of it as they saw fit. Marvin could have satisfied it if he chose, by returning the property, and this whether Simmons was willing to receive it or not. On the other hand, Simmons had no right to the money judgment if delivery of the property could be had. But it was competent for Simmons to accept Marvin’s offer to pay the money and to satisfy the judgment. This was done and the legal effect of accepting the money judgment is to pass the title to the wheat from Simmons to Marvin: Cobbey on Replevin (2 ed.), §§ 1174, 1178; First Nat. Bank v. Johnston, 161 N. C. 506 (77 S. E. 404); Duroth Mfg. Co. v. Cauffiel, 243 Pa. 24 (89 Atl. 798). It is analogous to the situation in actions of trover where the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the conversion of his property. On satisfaction of a judgment for damages the title to the property passes to the judgment debtor. Some authorities are collated in Acheson v. Miller, 2 Ohio St. 203 (59 Am. Dec. 663).

5. "When it accepted custody of the wheat from Marvin and issued to him its "warehouse receipts for the same, the defendant became Marvin’s bailee. In a [96]*96certain sense it recognized Ms title and, so to speak, attorned to Mm.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P. 893, 89 Or. 89, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidhizar-v-elgin-forwarding-co-or-1918.