Emery Consolidated Mining Co. v. Erickson

208 P. 935, 64 Mont. 190, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 145
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1922
DocketNo. 4,838
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 208 P. 935 (Emery Consolidated Mining Co. v. Erickson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emery Consolidated Mining Co. v. Erickson, 208 P. 935, 64 Mont. 190, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 145 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

MR,. JUSTICE FARR

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in claim and delivery to recover certain scrap iron and machinery parts. The case was tried to a jury, which.found a verdict for the defendants. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered on the verdict and from the order denying its motion for a new trial.

Plaintiff is a mining company owning certain mining claims about eight miles east of Deer Lodge, in Powell county, Montana, together with a mill and mining machinery located thereon. The scrap iron and machinery parts described in the complaint are a portion of the machinery which was contained in plaintiff’s mill upon its mining property and had been installed in the mill from about 1907 until the latter part of 1918, when it was hauled by the defendant Arthur Erickson, at the instance of one Rosenblatt, to Deer Lodge and was there piled in an alley back of the Old City Hotel. It was the contention of defendants at the trial that the plaintiff had, prior to the hauling by Erickson, made a sale of all the material hauled by him to Rosenblatt, thereby parting with its title which otherwise was unquestionably established in the plaintiff. The plaintiff contended that it had never sold or otherwise parted with its title to the property involved in this particular suit, although admitting that Rosenblatt had obtained some scrap iron from the mining property, which he had shipped out of the state. It is conceded that Erickson, [194]*194beginning about November 1, 1918, at the behest of Rosenblatt, hauled the property in question from plaintiff’s mill to Deer Lodge; that upon July 15 following, he purchased the property at sheriff’s sale under execution issued on a judgment in a suit brought by him against Rosenblatt, it being sold as Rosenblatt’s property; that soon after he purchased it, he sold it to the defendant Rothman, who took possession of it and started moving it from where it had been stored in the alley to his own home, and, while moving it, it was taken by the sheriff pursuant to the claim and delivery proceedings in this action.

The court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant Erickson upon the theory that prior to the commencement of this action Erickson had parted with the possession of the property, and whether or not his possession had ever been rightful, or he had any right to sell it to Roth-man, was an immaterial question in the case; the property being entirely in the possession of Rothman at the time of the commencement of the action. Plaintiff acquiesced in this ruling.

Error is first assigned to the order overruling the plaintiff’s motion for .a directed verdict. The facts may be summarized to the effect that the property described in the complaint confessedly is the machinery and broken parts which, prior to being taken possession of by defendant Erickson, was in the min of plaintiff and was its property, unless it had been sold to A. Rosenblatt, and there is no room for a contention that plaintiff had parted with its «title in any other manner; and likewise there is no room for contention that Rothman had a scintilla of title otherwise than under the theory of a sale to Rosenblatt. Whether there had been a sale to Rosenblatt was, therefore, the only question for determination by the trial court or jury. And the first question for this court’s determination is whether there was sufficient competent evidence to warrant the submission of that question to the jury. If there was not, then the motion should have been sustained.

[195]*195The defendant Arthur Erickson testified that at the request of Eosenblatt he hauled certain junk, scrap iron, and old pipe from the plaintiff’s plant and property—a little over sixty tons—and that a little over thirty-two tons of it was loaded on to a car on the Northern Pacific tracks at the town of Deer Lodge. He testified that before hauling this material, he talked with Mr. Joseph Whitworth, who was then the president of the plaintiff corporation, and that he asked Wltitworth “if Mr. Eosenblatt bought this stuff, and whether it was all right for me to haul it or not. * * * What he did tell me was that it was all right, that Eosenblatt had paid for it, and to go right ahead and haul it if he wanted me to. I didn’t ask him how much machinery Eosenblatt had bought. I didn’t ask him how much the company had sold to Eoseblatt.” Whitworth, on rebuttal, testified that he had no recollection of any conversation to that effect; that when Erickson Was hauling the first car, he (Whitworth) asked Erickson who authorized him to haul the stuff, to which Erickson replied, “Mr. Eosenblatt.” Whitworth further testified that “Eosenblatt did not buy this stuff; he was to take me up, and I was to show him what we had, but we never went up; he simply went up and took it out for himself [Mr. Eosenblatt] without any authority. I didn’t tell Mr. Erickson anything about hauling more of it. When he was hauling that first car, he was hauling some rails, and I told him he must not haul those rails or any pipe, but I wanted it left there.”

In support of defendants’ contention that there had been a sale of the property from the plaintiff mining company to Eosenblatt, there was introduced in evidence the record of an action in the justice court of Cottonwood township, Powell county, wherein this appellant was plaintiff and A. Eosenblatt was defendant. The complaint in that action alleged that plaintiff had sold to A. Eosenblatt 62,100 pounds of scrap iron at nine dollars per ton, and plaintiff therein sought judgment for the purchase price. A summons and writ of attachment were issued when suit was commenced, but the suit [196]*196was later dismissed; the docket reciting that it had been “settled out of court.” The plaintiff objected to this justice court complaint being received in evidence on the ground “That it does not appear that the property mentioned in the complaint for the purchase price of which the action was brought is in any manner contained in the property described in the complaint in this suit.” This objection was overruled, and the complaint was received in evidence.

It was necessary for the defendants who offered this testimony to show its admissibility. This could only be done by showing that the property for which the plaintiff sought pay in that suit in the justice court was the same property that is involved in this present controversy. If it was not the same, if it was different property, then it must be apparent that so far as this suit is concerned it is entirely immaterial that plaintiff brought an action for the recovery of its value. If it was the same property, then the evidence would have been relevant and material as showing, or tending to show, that there had been in fact a sale of the material to Rosenblatt, which defendants undertook to prove in order to prevent judgment going against them. However, the complaint in the justice court ease was received in evidence without any such showing. In rebuttal, Joseph Whitworth testified in regard to the bringing of this justice court action that the property that was attached at that time was not any of the property that is involved in this action, and that the property involved in that attachment suit went to Seattle as far as he knew.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 P. 935, 64 Mont. 190, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emery-consolidated-mining-co-v-erickson-mont-1922.