Hawthorne v. Arlt

238 N.W. 153, 59 S.D. 76, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 155
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1931
DocketFile No. 7246.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 153 (Hawthorne v. Arlt) 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
Hawthorne v. Arlt, 238 N.W. 153, 59 S.D. 76, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 155 (S.D. 1931).

Opinion

GAMPBELE, J.

In January, 1930, Arlt (one of the defendants herein), as plaintiff, instituted an action in the circuit court in 'Custer county, -S. D., against Plawthorne (plaintiff in the present cause) as defendant, seeking the recovery of certain personal property. In that action the there plaintiff Arlt invoked the provisional remedy of claim and delivery (Rev. Code 1919, §§ 2411-2422) and claimed the immediate delivery of the personal property involved, and to that end made the affidavit contemplated by section 2412, Rev. Code, 1919, and furnished the written undertaking contemplated by section 2414, Rev. Code 1919, upon which *77 undertaking the there plaintiff (and present defendant) Arlt wag principal and Detroit Fidelity & Guaranty Company, a corporation (codefendant of Arlt in the present case), was surety. The undertaking ran in favor of Hawthorne, defendant in said action (plaintiff in the present cause), and was, in substance, as follows, omitting title of action, signatures, etc.:

“That we, W. G. Arlt, as principal, and Detroit Fidelity •& Guaranty Company, as surety, are held and firmly bound unto the defendant above named in the sum of Two Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00) lawful money of the United • States, to be paid to said defendant, his heirs, legal representatives or assigns, for which payment well and truly to be made we bind ourselves and each of our heirs and legal representatives jointly and severally by these presents:
“The conditions of this obligation are such, That whereas, the above named plaintiff has commenced the action above entitled to recover from the above named defendant certain personal property in the complaint specified, claims the immediate delivery thereof, and has duly required the Sheriff of said County to take said property from said defendant and deliver it to said plaintiff.
“Nowq therefore, we, the undersigned as surety, do hereby undertake and bind ourselves in the sum of Two Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00) for the prosecution of the said action and for the return to the said defendant of the said property if return thereof shall be adjudged and for the payment to- the said defendant of airy sum as may be recovered in said action against the plaintiff.”

Pursuant to the affidavit, undertaking, and requisition in said action of Arlt v. Hawthorne (which we will hereafter for convenience denominate “the claim and delivery action”), the sheriff took possession of the personal property in question. It appears that said claim and delivery action was dismissed without prejudice and a judgment entered therein on May 2, 1930, awarding the return of the personalty in question to the there 'defendant Hawthorne, and providing that, in case said property was not returned to him in as good condition as when taken, he should have judgment against the there plaintiff Arlt for the sum. of $1,000, the value of said property.

Thereafter and on June 16, 1930, Hawthorne (defendant in the claim and delivery action), as plaintiff, instituted the present *78 action against 'Arlt (plaintiff in the claim and delivery action) and Detroit Fidelity & Guaranty Company (surety on Arlt’s undertaking in the claim an'di delivery action), as defendants, wherein he seeks to recover the sum of $1,000, with interest as the value of the personalty in question, and the further sum of $1,075 as damages by reason of his being wrongfully deprived of the possession of said personalty. The present action was likewise instituted in the circuit court in Custer county, S. D. The defendant Arlt is, and at all times here involved has been, a resident of Pennington county, S. D., and his codefendant Detroit Fidelity & Guaranty Company is a foreign corporation which maintains no- office within the state of South Dakota. Before the expiration of the time for answer defendant Arlt made written demand, pursuant to section 2328, Rev. Code 1919, for the change of the place of trial of the present action to Pennington county, S’. D. Plaintiff not consenting thereto, defendant Arlt applied to the court in due form and upon proper showing for an order changing the place of trial, and upon hearing the learned trial judge made and entered his order denying said application for change of place of trial, the effective portions thereof being as follows: “It is hereby ordered, That the aforesaid motion of the said defendant for a change of place of trial of this action be and it is hereby in all things denied upon the sole ground that it appears that this is such an action as is contemplated by subdivision 5 of section 2325 of the 1919 Revised Code of the State of -South Dakota; and defendant’s said motion is hereby denied upon the sole ground that it is an action for the ca-use provided in said! subdivision 5 of said Code Section 23-25.” From said order denying his application for change of place of trial, defendant Arlt has now appealed.

An order of this nature has always -been deemed by this court an appealable order. White v. C. M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 5 Dak. 508, 41 N. W. 730; Ivanusch v. Gt. Northern Ry., 26 S. D. 158, 128 N. W. 333; Fritz v. Hall, 48 S. D. 577, 205 N. W. 378.

The provisions of our statute with reference to place of trial in -civil actions are found in sections 2325-2328, Rev. Code 190:9.

The learned trial judge, as hereinbefore quoted, based his order solely and exclusively on subdivision 5, § 2325, Rev. Code 1919, which reads as follows: “5. All actions brought on a policy of insurance to recover for loss or damage to the property insured *79 shall be tried in the county where such property is situated at the time of its loss or damage.” 'Counsel for respondent, upon the record before us, suggests no other or better reason for retaining the place of trial of this action in Custer county, S. D. The residence of appellant Arlt in Pennington county and nonresidence in this state of the corporate defendant are conceded, and it seems to be tacitly admitted by all parties that the place of trial of this action should be changed to Pennington county, so far as shown by the record made herein, unless it may be retained in Custer county by virtue of subdivision 5, § 2325, Rev. ’Code 1919, above set out. We therefore confine ourselves to determining the single question 'of whether or not the present action is one upon a policy of insurance within the meaning' of said subdivision. Joining in the assumption of the parties to this record that the present proceeding is no more and no less than an action against the principal and surety for breach of the undertaking furnished in the claim and delivery action, the question may be thus phrased: “Is an undertaking in claim and delivery furnished! pursuant to the terms of section 2414, Rev. Code 1919, a 'policy of insurance’ within the meaning of subdivision 5, § 2325, Rev. Code 1919?”

It seems to us that the mere statement of the question above phrased is almost sufficient to demonstrate the necessity of a negative answer. Respondent relies, however, upon the decision of this court in Farmers’ Bk. of Reliance v. Equitable Fidelity, etc., Co., 35 S. D. 385, 152 N. W. 512, and the existence, of that decision is undoubtedly the explanation of the ruling of the learned trial judge in this case. In the Reliance Bank Case one M. was assistant cashier of plaintiff bank in Lyman county; S.

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

Related

City of Gregory v. Clausen
99 N.W.2d 883 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1959)
Wood v. Waggoner
293 N.W. 188 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1940)
Rosebud Lumber & Coal Co. v. Ryan
289 N.W. 81 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1939)
Herron v. Fox
288 N.W. 459 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 153, 59 S.D. 76, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawthorne-v-arlt-sd-1931.