John A. Malia, State Bank Com'r. v. Seeley

57 P.2d 357, 89 Utah 262, 1936 Utah LEXIS 116
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1936
DocketNo. 5586.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 P.2d 357 (John A. Malia, State Bank Com'r. v. Seeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John A. Malia, State Bank Com'r. v. Seeley, 57 P.2d 357, 89 Utah 262, 1936 Utah LEXIS 116 (Utah 1936).

Opinion

FOLLAND, Justice.

This is an action in claim and delivery for a herd of approximately 468 sheep. They were found in Uintah county, Utah, in possession of the defendant, who claimed them as his own. Plaintiff asserts the sheep are the survivors and increase of 300 ewes wrongfully taken in July of 1931 by the defendant from the herd of his father, Joseph N. Seeley, while under mortgage to the North Sanpete Bank. The bank in July of 1931 was taken over by the state bank com *265 missioner. Prior to the present action, the bank commissioner foreclosed the bank’s mortgage on the Joseph N. Seeley sheep, but at that time only 714 of the mortgaged sheep were found. The issue submitted to the jury was whether the sheep claimed in this action were the mortgaged sheep of Joseph N. Seeley or were sheep separately owned by the defendant, Maxwell D. Seeley. The verdict was for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals. Assigned errors attack the court’s rulings excluding certain offered evidence and in the giving of instructions to the jury and refusal to give instructions requested.

The record discloses that Joseph N. Seeley executed and delivered a chattel mortgage to the North Sanpete Bank on March 9,1931, to cover 1,200 sheep and reciting that 500 of the sheep were at the ranch of the mortgagor near Hayden in Duchesne and Uintah counties, and 700 were in a herd run by S. A. Russell in Uintah county. It recited that it covered and attached to all sheep owned by the mortgagor having the marks and brands described in the mortgage, together with the wool grown thereon and the offspring therefrom. In September of 1931 the bank commissioner, claiming default in respect to the mortgage note, undertook to possess the Seeley sheep. He located a flock of 714 in Uintah county, took possession by claim and delivery action, and later foreclosed the mortgage. Maxwell D. Seeley was made a party defendant in the foreclosure action. Joseph N. Seeley filed no answer, and his default was entered and judgment taken against him. Maxwell D. Seeley answered, claiming to be the owner of the sheep under a bill of sale from his father. Judgment was made and entered for the bank commissioner, wherein the interest of Maxwell D. Seeley was declared subordinate and inferior to that of the commissioner, the mortgage foreclosed, and the sheep sold; that is, the mortgage on all the sheep involved was foreclosed but only 714 sheep were found. These were sold. The complaint herein recites that 300 sheep were sold to the bank commissioner. We assume this sale to the bank *266 commissioner was of sheep not then in possession, and that by virtue of this sale he claims the sheep here in controversy as sheep on which the mortgage was foreclosed and sold to him for and on behalf of the bank and its creditors. The sheep involved in the present action were found in possession of the defendant at Hayden, Uintah county. Demand was made for their possession and refused, whereupon this action was commenced. Plaintiff alleged the sheep were survivors and increase of 300 sheep unlawfully and wrongfully separated and taken from the Joseph N. Seeley herd by the defendant in July of 1981 with full knowledge and notice that the sheep were mortgaged and with intent to defraud the bank and its creditors; that the defendant had changed the marks and brands on such sheep with the same knowledge and intent. Defendant answered, denying the allegations of wrongful conduct, and affirmatively alleged that the sheep involved were not within those foreclosed upon and sold to the plaintiff at foreclosure sale, and that any and all sheep sold pursuant thereto were other, separate, and distinct sheep from those affected by this action, and that the right of action based on the note and mortgage became merged in the deficiency judgment in the foreclosure suit, and that any rights of plaintiff are now extinguished by reason thereof. He further alleged that the sheep were his own property, owned by him in his individual right, and not subject to any claim or demand of plaintiff.

The evidence need not be stated in detail. Each party adduced evidence tending to support the allegations of such party. The evidence of both parties proved that the sheep in issue were the survivors, the increase and replacements of 300 ewes concededly separated by the defendant from the herd of his father in July of 1931, and that defendant changed the marks and brands of the original sheep. It was conceded, too, that the defendant had charge of his father’s sheep in July of 1931 and had control over them for more than two years prior thereto.

Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the sheep so sep *267 arated from the Seeley herd were owned by Joseph N. Seeley, bore his marks and brands, were sheep that were covered by the mortgage to the bank, and that the change of the marks and brands by Maxwell D. Seeley was for the purpose of defrauding the bank and its creditors. Defendant’s evidence tended to show that he had personally bought the sheep from others prior to 1931, which sheep he had run with his father’s herd until July of that year, when they were separated and put in another herd under lease; that the marks and brands of such sheep were those of the former owners from whom they had been purchased and had been changed by Maxwell D. Seeley to his own marks and brands. There was a sharp conflict in the evidence, and from the evidence the jury could well have found for the plaintiff, or, as it did, for the defendant. The judgment must be sustained unless prejudicial error is found in the rulings of the court on admission of the evidence or with respect to instructions to the jury.

The defendant testified that in 1929 he was running his father’s sheep; that he personally bought a small band of sheep from one Leavitt in 1929 which was run with his father’s herd; that he and one Ashton bought sheep in the fall of 1929, and, after selling the wethers, kept the ewes, and on a division of these sheep between them Maxwell ran his sheep in the herd of his father; that he branded and marked his own sheep differently from those of his father, describing the marks and brands on both; and that when the sheep were sheared his wool was separately piled and sacked but sold with his father’s wool; that his own sheep remained in the Joseph N. Seeley herd until July of 1931, when he separated them at Arnold’s corral; and that he then leased them to George Arnold, who took them into his herd. On cross-examination defendant was asked if he had not testified on the trial in the foreclosure suit that he had claimed the sheep in his father’s herd as his own under a bill of - salé from his father, to which he answered that he had. The bill of sale was identified by him and intro *268 duced in evidence. In rebuttal the plaintiff offered the transcript of all the defendant’s testimony in the foreclosure suit, and, on objection being sustained, offered separately specific parts of such testimony, including an answer 'by Maxwell D. Seeley that he was not a partner with his father in running the sheep. The objections made to the offers were that they were not proper rebuttal, not impeachment, and that no proper foundation had been laid for the admission of the transcript or any part thereof. The court sustained the objection on the ground it was not rebuttal.

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Bluebook (online)
57 P.2d 357, 89 Utah 262, 1936 Utah LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-a-malia-state-bank-comr-v-seeley-utah-1936.