Eddings v. Boner

38 S.W. 1110, 1 Indian Terr. 173, 1897 Indian Terr. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt Of Appeals Of Indian Territory
DecidedJanuary 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 1110 (Eddings v. Boner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Appeals Of Indian Territory primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddings v. Boner, 38 S.W. 1110, 1 Indian Terr. 173, 1897 Indian Terr. LEXIS 41 (Conn. 1897).

Opinion

Kilgore, J.

(after stating the facts). The Arkansa statute in force here provides that in an action to recover th| possession of specific personal property the plaintiff may, the beginning of the suit, or at any time before judgment secure the delivery of the property by employing the ancillarl remedies authorized by the chapter on replevin of Man^ field’s Digest. He may go further, and cause the arrest the defendant, by filing a separate affidavit to the effect thi he believes the property has been concealed, removed, or i| some way disposed of to defeat the plaintiff’s action. It ha been determined that the remedy provided by the chapt<| on replevin superseded both the old action of replevin ar detinue. The first, and essential, requisite in such suits that the complaint, affidavit, and order of delivery must col tain a particular description of the property claimed. It wl contended by the appellant, the defendant below, both on ttj trial in the District Court and on the hearing in this coui that the plaintiff could not maintain replevin in this cau| for the want of a particular description of the specific pe [177]*177sonal property in controversy; and he undertook, by motions, etc., to eliminate from this suit all the articles described in the complaint — the money, for instance — except the waist belt, pocketbook, and purse, each valued at 50 cents, on the theory that money could not be recovered in an action in re-plevin. The appellee, plaintiff below, answered this conten-ion by amending his complaint and setting up that the noney described therein was contained in a canvas waist aelt. There was no further exception for the want of full lescription; so this court must conclude that the description )f the belt was sufficient, though it is quite meager and un-lertain, and would probably have been held by the court be-ow to be defective if exception to it had been specially irged.

Money. I Cl0El‘blnCél'DlO)l

The contention of appellant’s counsel that money can-ot be the subject of an action of replevin is not entirely ound. Replevin may be maintained for the recovery of loney the same as for any other personal property. • The i ifficulty in such cases arises on a question of a description nd identification of the money. Cobbey, Repl. § 72, says: Money is not the subject of an action of replevin, unless it s marked or designated in some manner, so as to become aecific as regards the power of identification. ” This is the eneral rule, and it applies as well to every other character ü personal property the recovery of which is sought in an jtion of replevin. There is much more difficulty, of course, describing coin or currency specifically or for identifica-on and for segregation from other money and currency of ce denomination than in the instance of other personal fects. After describing the money and currency as set out the foregoing statement, appellee alleges that the money, pocketbook, and purse, were all contained in one waist fit made of ducking, of the value of 50 cents, at the time .e same passed out of his possession and into the posses[178]*178sion of the appellant. There is no specific description of th coin and currency in the plaintiff’s complaint, affidavit an order of delivery that could possibly lead to the identific tion of those articles, except that they are contained in waist belt made of ducking, and for this package he seels recovery in this suit. There seems to be no doubt that tb suit can be maintained on the theory of the plaintiff amended pleadings and process. In Hamilton vs Clark, 2 Mo. App. 428, the rule is laid down as follows : “Money not the subject of an action of replevin, unless it is marke or designated in some manner so as to become specific as r gards the power of identification; such as being in a bag < package.” In Skidmore vs Taylor, 29 Cal. 619, it is said th replevin is the proper remedy to recover a package of go. coin sealed up in a leather bag. In Sharon vs Nunan, 63 Cal. 234, it was held that money sealed up in a canvas ba: marked with a tag, on which was written the name of tl owner, and deposited in a vault of a safe deposit compan; was the subject of replevin. In Griffith vs Bogardus, 14 Cal. 410, there was a seizure by the sheriff, under a writ again M., of $1,800 in coin, a portion of a large amount of mom in a safe, as the property of the defendant, and it was put a bag. The plaintiff then claimed the money as his, M ing present and not objecting, and the court held t' amounted to a segregation of the $1,800 from the mass coin in the safe, so that replevin could be maintained for tl identical coin. The rule seems to be that in all such cas| the plaintiff must recover the specific property for which sues. At the same time he is entitled to a personal ju< ment against the defendant for the value thereof on recoveij enforceable by execution, in case of failure to secure the cj livery of the property in controversy.

Money. Description.

At the October term, 1895, of said court, and befoj the trial began, the appellant moved to vacate the order arrest, on the ground that the plaintiff had not executl [179]*179ond to indemnify the defendant, as required by section 5575, fansf. Dig., before the order of arrest was complied with by he marshal. This motion was struck out by the court, on lotion of the appellee, and the court refused to cousider the ame, on the ground that the appellant had answered m the ase, and had given bail and been discharged from arrest, ection 5574 of Mansfield’s Digest provides for an order for íe delivery of property claimed to belong to the plaintiff in iplevin, and for the arrest of the defendant. Section, 5575 rects that the order shall not be complied with by .the leriff unless there has been executed in his presence, by íe or more sufficient sureties of the plaintiff, a bond to the fiendant to the effect that the plaintiff will duly prosecute Le action, that he will perform the judgment of the court erein by returning the property if a return shall be Ljudged, and by paying such sums of money as may be judged against him in the action, not exceeding double the lue of the property, and the costs' in the action. The bond quired by this section of the statute was not given by the aintiff, and no effort was made to comply with the law. Wilson vs Williams, 52 Ark. 360, 12 S. W. 780, the sheriff was ed for the value of a certain property which he had taken >m the plaintiff as defendant in an action of replevin under order of delivery. He had taken a bond from the plain- : in the replevin action before complying with the order of ' zure, but without any sureties thereon. It was held in it case that a bond with sureties, as required by law, was ¡ential to the lawful seizure of the property, and that, in > absence of such bond, the sheriff seizing the property ed without legal authority. The order for the arrest of defendant rests upon the same authority, and if there is r difference in the rule requiring the execution of the bond i condition precedent to the arrest of the defendant it ild be considered more exacting than that relating to the ¡ure of his property.

Arrest. Bail tond‘ Answor. Es-toppel. Ball bond. Object.

We cannot assent to the doctrine that the appella: waived any fundamental error in the original proceedii which led to his arrest by answering in the case and givii bail to secure his discharge from custody, inasmuch as tl statute, he insisted, had not been complied within a materi particular.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rozen v. Redco Corporation
1961 OK 50 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1961)
Hillyer v. Eggers
164 P. 27 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)
Davis v. Mimey
1916 OK 361 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1916)
State v. Keller
81 S.E. 972 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 1110, 1 Indian Terr. 173, 1897 Indian Terr. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddings-v-boner-ctappindterr-1897.