Handlan-Buck Manufacturing Co. v. Waterloo Drop Forge Co.

173 Iowa 452
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 173 Iowa 452 (Handlan-Buck Manufacturing Co. v. Waterloo Drop Forge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Handlan-Buck Manufacturing Co. v. Waterloo Drop Forge Co., 173 Iowa 452 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

This action at law is in replevin for the recovery of the possession of a large lot of machinery and tools of which, plaintiff claims to be the absolute and unqualified owner. There was an answer by the defendant, O. W. Mullan, denying the alleged ownership by the plaintiff and setting up a qualified title in himself and right to the possession of the property under a trust deed made to him by the Waterloo Drop Forge Company to secure payment of their debts, and stating that he took said title without notice of any right or claim thereto on the part of plaintiff. Thereafter, the persons named in the caption hereof as interveners [454]*454filed a petition of intervention, alleging themselves to be creditors of the Waterloo Drop Forge Company, setting up the transfer of the title to the property to C. W. Mullan in trust for their benefit, and their acceptance of the benefit of the security so provided, without knowledge or notice of any right or claim to the property by the plaintiff. Both trustee and interveners allege that plaintiff’s claim is founded upon a reservation of title made in a contract of conditional sale of the property in controversy to the Waterloo Drop Forge Company, which contract or bill of sale was never recorded, as provided by statute, and that such contract, so far as-relates to the condition reserved therein, was and is void as against themselves. In reply, plaintiff denies that the contract between itself and the Drop Forge Company was one of conditional sale, and avers that it never parted with the title to the property conditionally or otherwise. There was trial to a jury, which returned a verdict for defendants, and assessed the value of the property at $7,500.

1. Appeal and error : assignment of errors .* omnibus assignment. 2. evidence: declarations: ex-pianatory of possession of property. I. The first assignment of error argued by counsel is based upon the testimony of eight witnesses severally named, which testimony is said to have been admitted over the objection of the plaintiff. Strictly speaking, this . , , . ... . _ assignment, being omnibus m character, . directed m a single proposition against the testimony of numerous witnesses, without differentiating between them or pointing out the particular respect in which any one of them is objectionable, is insufficient to raise any question for our consideration. But we turn to another division of the brief, and find where counsel has ,. .. . „ _ . mentioned specifically an omection to inquiries answered by one of the witnesses as follows. It appears that the witness, one Burt, had visited the Drop Forge Company’s plant, with a view to investing therein, while the machinery was in the company’s possession, and concerning that visit he was asked by defendants’ counsel:

[455]*455“Q. I will ask you, Mr. Burt, whether anything was said at the time, by either Mr. Morris or Mr. Rockwell, to the effect or in substance that any of the machinery, tools or appliances that were in the plant were not owned by the Drop Forge Company and not a part of its assets. (Plaintiff objects upon the ground as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial and upon the further ground that any conversation had there, not in the presence of the plaintiff, could not in any manner bind the plaintiff, and that declarations by officers or employes o'f the company, not in the presence of the plaintiff, could not be binding upon the plaintiff. Objection overruled; plaintiff excepts.) A. No. Q. I will ask you, Mr. Burt, while Mr. Morris and Mr. Rockwell were showing you about the plant for the purpose of inducing you to become a member of the board of directors or a stockholder, whether they did or did not hold out to you, whether all of the machinery and personal property in the plant was the property of the Drop Forge Company. (Plaintiff objected upon the grounds urged in the previous interrogatory. Objection overruled; plaintiff excepted.) A. The matter was not definitely talked of in that respect to my knowledge»and recollection. Q. I will ask you whether anything was said along the lines that they were the owners of all the property which they showed to you at that time. (Objected to by plaintiff for the reasons urged in the former interrogatory of like character. Objections overruled; plaintiff excepts.) A. Nothing that would direct my attention to the fact that they were not the owners of the property.”

Even if the line of examination was objectionable, the answers of the witness were of that vague and colorless character from which we could not presume any prejudice to the plaintiff. But the fact that plaintiff was not present or represented at such conversation is not a good objection to the competency of the evidence. The declarations of persons in possession of personal property with reference to the title thereto or explanatory ■ of their possession may properly be [456]*456shown. Stephens v. Williams, 46 Iowa 540, 543. It may further be said that in this ease this line of inquiry was pursued with several other witnesses, and answers admitted without objection or exception. Concerning the other witnesses named in the assignment of error, it is sufficient to say that no exceptions to their testimony appear to have been preserved.

3. Sales : conditional sales: ' sales under guise of lease: legal effect of instrument controlling. II. At the close of all the evidence, plaintiff moved for a directed verdict in its favor on the ground that the contract by which the Drop Forge Company obtained and held possession of the property was not a contract of sale, and that it appeared without dispute that the title thereto had never passed from the plaintiff. The motion was denied and error is assigned thereon. ■

The contract in question, omitting the formal parts and the itemized list of machinery, is in words as follows: [457]*457Thousand Dollars on the 2nd day of March, 1910, Five Thousand Dollars on the 2nd day of September, 1910, and Five Thousand Dollars on the 2nd day of March, 1911; party of the second part agrees to give its certain promissory notes due on said dates, and for the said amount, to the party of the first part, immediately upon the signing of this contract.

[456]*456“Whereas, Party of the first part is a manufacturer and agent of various kinds of machines, castings, drills, vises, planing machines, screw machines and other property which party of the second part desires to use, and,
“Whereas, Party of the second part desires to pay by notes for the use of said materials and machines which are hereinafter specified.
“Now, Therefore, In consideration of the covenants hereinafter specified, and the sum of One Dollar, paid by party of the second part to the party of the first part, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, it is agreed between the parties as follows:
“First. Party of the first part agrees to allow party of the second part to use the following described property from the date of this contract, up to and including the 2nd day of March, 1911, to wit: [Here follows itemized list.]
“Second. Party of the second part agrees to pay party of the first part Fifteen Thousand Dollars for the use of said machinery, material, and properties, described in paragraph first of this contract; said payments to be made Five
[457]*457“Third.

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Bluebook (online)
173 Iowa 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/handlan-buck-manufacturing-co-v-waterloo-drop-forge-co-iowa-1916.