Dunlap v. Thiele

265 N.W. 593, 64 S.D. 150, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 18
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1936
DocketFile No. 7869.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 265 N.W. 593 (Dunlap v. Thiele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunlap v. Thiele, 265 N.W. 593, 64 S.D. 150, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 18 (S.D. 1936).

Opinion

CAM’PBEEL, J.

J. C. ‘Dunlap owned a farm in Moody county which he leased to one Thiele during the farming seasons of 1928 to 1931, inclusive. The lease was made in the fall of 1927 for an annual cash rental of $640, and J. C. Dunlap took and immediately filed a chattel mortgage on the entire 1928 crop of small grain and corn to secure the payment of said rental. After the termination of Thiele’s tenancy and in 1932, J. C. Dunlap claimed that there was an unpaid 'balance of about $450 on the cash rent due for the season of 1928, and that he had discovered that Thiele, regardless of the mortgage, had sold to the Wentworth Elevator Company small grain anidl corn of the 1928 crop to an amount exceeding said $450. Phrsuant to such contentions he instituted an action in the Moody county circuit court against the tenant Thiele and the elevator company seeking damages for the conversion.

While that action was pending, and on February 22, 1933, J. C. Dunlap executed a writing assigning and transferring to R. H. Dunlap 'his interest in the lease to Thiele, the claim for the 1928 cash rent and the security therefor and all his right, title, amdl interest in and to the pending action against Thiele and the elevator company for the conversion of the 1928 crop.

J. C. Dunlap died March 22, 1933, and thereafter and by virtue of the assignment above mentioned R. H. D’unlap personally and individually was substituted as party plaintiff in the conversion action instituted by J. C. Dunlap, and the action proceeded to trial. The defendant elevator company contended that J. C. Dunlap had consented that Thiele should sell the 1928 crop to the elevator company and had thereby waived the lien of his chattel mortgage thereon. Defendant Thiele was called as a witness, and the elevator company undertook by examination of Thiele to show conversations between Thiele and J. C. D'unlap consenting to the sale of the crop. To this line of testimony plaintiff R. PI. Dunlap objected on *152 the theory that it was incompetent under the provision of section 2717, R. C. 1919. The trial judge ruled that the provisions of section 2717 did not extend to a case where the party plaintiff was suing not as executor, administrator, heir at law, or next of kin of a decedent, but merely as assignee of a decedent, and overruled the objections. Thereupon R. H. Dunlap, plaintiff, as assignee of J. C. Dunlap, dismissed the conversion action without prejudice.

J. C. Dunlap left a will wherein he named R. H. Dunlap' as executor and sole beneficiary. After dismissing the conversion action wherein he as assignee was plaintiff, R. H. Dunlap procured the admission of the J. C. Dunlap will to probate in the county court of Moody county and the issuance of letters testamentary to himself.

Thereafter, and on October 7, 1933, R. H. Dunlap, individually, executed and delivered to George Danforth, as attorney for R. H. Dunlap executor, an instrument denominated “Assignment,” reciting the fact of the prior assignment of the claim' against Thiele and the elevator company by J. C. D'unlap to R. H. Dunlap on February 22, 1933, and reciting that said assignment was made merely for the purpose of collection and that the claim was in truth and in fact at all times the property of J. C. Dunlap, and assigning and transferring said1 claim and all right and interest therein to the executor of J. 'C. Dunlap “for the purpose of vesting all rights in the matters referred to in said estate where the same property belongs * * * reserving no personal interest of any kind' or character * * * and intending to vest all interest in said estate and in the executor of the will of said deceased.”

Two days later, and on October 9, 1933, the present action was started by R. FI. D'unlap as executor against Thiele and the elevator company for the same identical conversion for which J. C. Dunlap had sued and which suit had been dismissed without prejudice by R. FL Dunlap individually as assignee.

Thiele did not answer. The elevator company answered and set up, among other defenses, that if it purchased any grain from Thiele covered by the J. C. Diunlap mortgage, it was with the knowledge and consent of J. C. Dunlap, who waived any lien or mortgage thereon. It is to be noted that the claimed conversion *153 occurred in 1928 and' that no demand was made upon the elevator company or claim asserted against the elevator company until some time in 1932.

At the trial of the issues 'between plaintiff amdl t'he elevator company, Thiele (who was already in default, although no default judgment had been entered against him) was permitted to be called by the plaintiff as an adverse witness under the statute over the objection of the elevator 'company.

Defendant elevator company offered to show by Thiele conversations with J. -C. Dunlap wherein he consented to and in fact directed the sale of the grain in question. To- this offer plaintiff objected on the ground1 that the same was incompetent under section 2717, R. C. 1919, which objection was sustained.

The defendant elevator company also offered to prove that J. C. Dunlap, prior to his death, conveyed all his property of every kind to R. H. Dunlap, which offer was objected to by plaintiff and objections sustained, notwithstanding the fact that the answer alleged that the real owner of the claim in question was R. H. Dunlap.

At the close o-f all the testimony, the court -directed a verdict in favor oí the plaintiff, subsequently denied defendant’s motion for new trial, and defendant has appealed.

Appellant predicates error upon the ruling of the court in. permitting respondent, under the circumstances of this case, to call and examine the defaulting codefendant Thiele under the provisions of section 2714, R. C. 1919. We think appellant is right in this contention. W'e have had since territorial days a law permitting the calling of an adverse party for cross-examination. It -first appeared upon our books as section 312, Code of Civil Procedure 1867-8 (Laws Dakota Terr. 1867-8, p. 101), and was taken verbatim from section 344, N. Y. Code of Civil Procedure of 1848 (-chapter 379, Laws N. Y. 1848). The provision carried on through our Codes (section 439, Code'Civ-il Procedure 1877; section 5253, 'Comp. Laws 1887; section 479, Rev. Code -Civil Procedure 1903) until the enactment by our Legislature of chapter 72, Laws 1909. Chapter 72, Laws 1909, did- not, upon its face, purport to be an amendatory act,- but it was substituted by the Code Commission of 19119 for the previous law upon the sub j ect and is now without sub *154 stantial change section 2714, R. C. 1919. The 1909 statute, as this court lias previously had occasion to point out (Langford v. Issenhuth [1912] 28 S. D. 451, 134 N. W. 889), was taken verbatim from the then existing Minnesota statute (section 4662, Rev. Laws Minn. 1905), which had been often before the Minnesota court. At the time we adopted the Minnesota law, it was established by the Minnesota decisions that this statute did not authorize a plaintiff, as a matter of strict legal right, to call a defaulting defendant for cross-examination as an adverse witness. See Suter v. Page (1896) 64 Minn. 444, 67 N. W. 67; Bernick v. McClure (Jan. 1909) 107 Minn. 9, 119 N. W. 247. See, also, Loring v. Swanson (1930) 180 Minn. 104, 230 N. W. 277; Moore v. May (1903) 117 Wis. 192, 94 N. W. 45.

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Bluebook (online)
265 N.W. 593, 64 S.D. 150, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-thiele-sd-1936.