Keenan v. Washington Liquor Co.

69 P. 112, 8 Idaho 383, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 25
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 P. 112 (Keenan v. Washington Liquor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keenan v. Washington Liquor Co., 69 P. 112, 8 Idaho 383, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 25 (Idaho 1902).

Opinion

QUABLES, C. J.

— The respondent in this action (plaintiff below) commenced an action in the probate court of Nez Perces county against C. H. Bussell, as defendant, to recover an alleged indebtedness due to respondent from said Bussell, and caused a writ of attachment to be issued in said action, which was levied upon certain goods and chattels comprising the stock in the saloon conducted by said Bussell, and thereafter such proceedings were had that the respondent recovered a judgment against said Bussell for the sum of $163.75. After the levy of said attachment upon said chattels, the appellant the Washington Liquor Company commenced an action in the justice’s court of West Lewiston precinct against Dudley Gilman, the constable, o recover said chattels, alleging ownership thereof, and executed a bond on claim and delivery, with the appellants John W. Denny and ¿T. Alexander as sureties thereon, conditioned that the said Washington Liquor Company would prosecute the said action, and that it would return the said chattels to the said defendant if the return thereof be adjudged by the court, and for the payment to defendant of such sum as may, from any cause, be recovered against the plaintiff in said action, not exceeding the sum of $200; and upon order duly indorsed upon the affidavit on claim and delivery in such cause the sheriff of Nez Perces county, acting under the instructions of the Washington Liquor Company, seized said chattels, and took them from possession of the constable who had attached same, and was holding same under the attachment levied in the action brought by the respondent against the said Bussell. Upon the return day of the summons in said action of claim and delivery, the plaintiff therein not being ready for trial, the trial was postponed by agreement of parties to the following day, to wit, until September 11, 1900, at 4 o’clock P. M. Afterward, and at said time, to wit, Tuesday, September 11, 1900, at 4 o’clock P. M., the plaintiff in said action, the Washington Liquor Company, being represented by one John A. [387]*387Guyer, had no evidence whatever to offer in support of its claim, whereupon defendant offered some oral evidence, after which said defendant, by his attorney, asked that the cause be dismissed, whereupon the same was dismissed by judgment entered in said justice’s docket, awarding the defendant therein his costs, taxed at five dollars and twenty cents. This action is brought upon the said undertaking on claim and delivery, and was originally commenced in the probate court of Nez Perces county, and removed therefrom to the district court upon an application for change of venue. After the cause reached the district court, a demurrer was interposed to the complaint, and by the court sustained, after which the respondent filed his amended complaint. In the original complaint it was alleged that the action for claim and delivery aforesaid was determined adversely to the said appellant the Washington Liquor Company. In the amended complaint the breach of said undertaking on claim and delivery is alleged as follows : “That the conditions of the said bond have been broken in this: 1. That the defendant herein, the Washington Liquor Company, principal in said bond, failed to prosecute the said action for claim and delivery, and at the trial of the same in the said justice’s court judgment of dismissal was rendered because thereof. 2. That prior to the dismissal of the said action in replevin the Washington Liquor Company had converted to its own use and sold and disposed of all the goods, wares, and merchandise so taken by virtue of said bond in said replevin action. 3. That the said Washington Liquor Company and the said Joseph Alexander and John W. Denny, each, every, and all failed, neglected, and refused to return the said property, or any part thereof, to the said Dudley Gilman, and that demand was made on the sureties thereof before the commencement of this action.” The allegations in said amended complaint, above quoted, alleging the breach of said undertaking, it is claimed by the appellants stated an entirely new cause of action from that alleged in the original complaint, and is contradictory to the allegations of said original complaint; and for said reasons said appellants moved to strike said alie[388]*388gations from said amended complaint, which motion was denied by the court, and this action of the court is one of the errors alleged by appellants.

We think the motion to strike was properly denied. Before issue joined, the plaintiff was properly permitted to amend his complaint so as to state the facts. We do not think that the allegation in the original complaint to the effect that the action on claim and delivery was determined adversely to the said Washington Liquor Company is so inconsistent with the allegation in the amended complaint that said plaintiff failed to prosecute the said action,' for which reason judgment of dismissal was rendered because thereof, as to make the latter allegation inadmissible in the amended complaint.

The defendants, appellants here, demurred to said amended complaint upon two grounds, to wit: 1. That the said amended complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; 2. That said amended complaint is uncertain, in this: That it contains no description of the property alleged to have been taken by the defendants, etc. — which demurrer was by the trial court overruled, and the action of the court in overruling same is one of the errors assigned. We think that said amended pleading states a cause of action. The second ground of demurrer was not well taken. The allegation describing the property seized under said claim and delivery proceedings and converted by the appellants in the following general terms, to wit: “A certain stock of liquors, tobaccos, and cigars then the property of C. H. Bussell,” etc. — was sufficient in an action upon said bond.

Upon the trial the court admitted in evidence, over appellants’ objections, the original complaint, summons, and affidavit on claim and delivery, notice on claim and delivery, and other original files in the action commenced by the appellant the Washington Liquor Company, as plaintiff, against said constable, Dudley Gilman, in said justice’s court; and the court also admitted the pleadings and original files in the action brought by the respondent, Keenan, against said Bussell in the probate court, over the objections of said appellants; and the action of the court in admitting such documentary evidence [389]*389constitutes the grounds upon which the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh assignments of error are based. The appellants contend that the admission of such evidence was improper, because the same, being íecords in the said inferior courts, was not admissible, and that the respondent should have introduced copies of the same. This contention is not well taken. The said records were competent evidence, and properly admitted as such at the trial.

The eighth error assigned was that the court erred in permitting the witness McConkey, over appellants’ objections, to answer the following questions: “Who was Dudley Gilman? Was he not the defendant in the action?” And the ninth error is based upon the action of the court in permitting said witness to answer the following questions: “Who was P. J. Keenan, who testified at that time? Was he not the plaintiff in this action?” The objection was not made to either of said questions that the same were leading, and, inasmuch as said questions related to introductory matters, the court did not err in permitting the same to be answered.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 P. 112, 8 Idaho 383, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keenan-v-washington-liquor-co-idaho-1902.