Kierstead v. Brown

23 Neb. 595
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 23 Neb. 595 (Kierstead v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kierstead v. Brown, 23 Neb. 595 (Neb. 1888).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

The petition alleges that, on the first day of January,, 1885, the plaintiff was the legal owner and entitled to the immediate possession of the following described personal property: One black horse about 11 years old, one. white fore foot, weighing about 1,200 pounds; one gray horse about 12 years old, weighing about 1,300 pounds; one Whitewater wagon; .each of said horses of the value of $150, and said wagon of the value of $75, which property was, at the time aforesaid, in possession of William McGuire, bailee of plaintiff; that on or about said time the defendant wrongfully and unlawfully converted the same to his own use; that the plaintiff’s demand upon the defendant for possession of said property and the value thereof was refused, to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $400, and interest from January 1, 1885, with prayer for judgment.

The defendant’s answer was a general denial.

On the trial, the plaintiff offered in evidence a certified copy of the chattel mortgage from William McGuire to the Northwestern Manufacturing & Car Company of Stillwater, Minnesota, and the notes on which the mortgage was given, which, over the objections of the defend[597]*597ant, were received in evidence. Also the deposition of Frederick L. Eichelberg. Objections were made by defendant to a portion of said depositions, which were overruled, and the depositions were received in evidence. Also the deposition of E. E. Brown, which was also admitted, over the objection of defendant to certain portions ■thereof.

Herman A Pasawalk was sworn for the plaintiff, and •testified that he resided at Norfolk, Nebraska, was by occupation a dealer in implements and farm machinery for •eight years, and agent for the sale of goods of the Northwestern Manufacturing & 'Car Company, and was at the time of the transactions involved in this case.

Q,. Do you know anything with reference to this ■•transaction, the giving of the mortgage and notes?

A. Yes, I made the sale.

Q,. Where was the matter closed up, at your office in Norfolk?

A. Yes.

Q,. You made the sale of the harvester?

A. Thresher, you mean, instead of harvester.
Q. Thresher and power ?
Q. Did you see the property covered by the cháttel mortgage ?
A. Yes, part of it. I didn’t see the plow and harrows.

Q,. You saw-the horses, did you?,

Q. You are acquainted with the value of horses in the market around there, are you ?

A. Yes, I was at that time.
Q. State the market value of the black horse.
A. At the time I took the mortgage I valued the horses ■ at $300.

Defendant moved to strike the answer from the record as not being responsive. Overruled and excepted.

[598]*598Q. What were they reasonably worth at that time?

A. What they could have been sold at?

Q,. Yes, what would have been the reasonable market value ?

A. Spot cash ?
Q. Yes, what were they worth?

A. Well, they could have been sold at that time for $300. I know that he hooked on to the separator ánd hauled it over to the yellow banks with one team, and they generally put on four horses when they haul one over there. It takes a very good team to haul a separator over the yellow banks.

Q,. Did you see the Whitewater wagon ?

Q. What was the serviceable value of that?

A. I should think it would be worth $40; the wagon, in my judgment, probably was four or five years old at that time. It was in a pretty fair shape, though, the wagon was.

Q. Do you know what has become of McGuire? Do you know where he is?
A. Nó, I don’t know.

Q,. Do you know what other horses, if any, McGuire had at his place ?

A. That is all the horses he had at that time, but I think he had another black pony afterwards, that was bought at Pierce, and when he went to Battle Creek it was not paid for and they went and got it again.

■ The substance of the deposition of Fred. L. Eichelberg is as follows:

Q. Are you the general sales agent of the plaintiff?
Q. How long have you been acting in that capacity?

A. About two and one-half months, but was engaged in the collection department of the plaintiff for about one year immediately preceding the making of the deposition now here.

[599]*599Q. Do you know anything of the making and execution of a certain chattel mortgage by one Wm. McGuire to the N. W. Mfg. & Car Co., of Stillwater, Minn.

A. I know of such a mortgage being placed on file.

' Q,. State, if you know, whether or not the mortgage was made to secure a valid, bona fide debt due the company from McGuire.

A. It was.'

Q,. State all you know, fully, as to the making of the ' chattel mortgage, and the consideration therefor.

A. It.was given to secure payment for a Minn. Chief separator and power. The property mortgaged was the said separator and power, two horses, one wagon, one set harness, one sulky plow, and one Marsh harvester, as I remember.

Q,. State whether or not the property described in the plaintiff’s petition is the same property as mentioned in the chattel mortgage executed by McGuire.

A. Yes, it is. I have examined this carefully.
Q. Where is the property now ?

A. Separator and power, the last I knew of them were in the country north-east of Burnett; the balance of the property was sold by J. H. Kierstead. One Hoover took the horses, wagon, and harness t'o Valentine; do not know where the balance of the property is.

Q. Who took the property from McGuire’s possession?

A. One Mr. Hoover levied an attachment on all the property except the separator and power, and advertised sale of same to take place at Battle Creek, Nebraska, where the property was taken; then J. H. Kierstead stopped the sale by virtue of a chattel mortgage that he held on that property, and moved the same to Burnett, Nebraska, where it was advertised and sold April 4,1885.

Q. Do you know the defendant, J. H. Kierstead?

Q. Did you ever have a conversation with him with [600]*600reference to the property described in the plaintiff’s petition ?

Q,. When and where did this conversation, or conversations, if more than one, occur?

A. In his store at Burnett, Nebraska, in May, 1885,= I remember three or four such conversations.

Q,. What did he say, if anything, to you about his having taken the property mentioned in the petition from McGuire’s possession ?

A.

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