Murphy v. Braase

32 P. 208, 3 Idaho 544, 3 Hasb. 544, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 10
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 P. 208 (Murphy v. Braase) 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
Murphy v. Braase, 32 P. 208, 3 Idaho 544, 3 Hasb. 544, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 10 (Idaho 1893).

Opinion

MORGAN, J.

(After Stating the Facts.) — The plaintiff, being introduced as a witness in his own behalf, says that he loaned P. H. Kinney the sum of $1,500 in the fall of 1889; that Kinney turned over the horses in controversy to him, together with some other personal property, as security for said money; that, at the time of said loan, a portion of the horses were in the possession of Nelson Brothers, ready to be taken to the winter range, and a portion at the Lufldn ranch. At the time of said contract of loan, a written bill of sale of the horses, duly executed, was delivered to plaintiff by said Kinney. In January, 1891, another bill of sale was executed, covering the same, with some additional property. The bills of sale are identified and introduced in evidence. Plaintiff further states that when said loan was made, said Kinney promised and agreed that the property should remain in the possession of the plaintiff until said debt was paid, and so notified Nelson Brothers and Lufkin; [548]*548that in the spring, when Nelson Brothers returned the horses from the winter range, they were turned over to him (the plaintiff) ; that he hired a man to look after them, and that they were in his possession until they were taken by the defendant, Braase, under the writ of attachment; that he paid charges claimed by Lufkin for breeding the mares; that he paid Nelson Brothers twenty-five dollars, which was all they demanded for wintering the horses in their possession; that he also paid the taxes on the horses; twenty-five dollars were paid to Nelson Brothers at the time they delivered the horses to the plaintiff in the spring; that he only held the horses and other property as security for a debt of $1,500; that, at the time of said loan, the property was not pointed out to him, but he had frequently seen the horses before that time, and knew them well; that, at the time the loan was made, Nelson Brothers, who had the horses in their corral, were present, and Kinney and this plaintiff (Murphy) called them out, and explained that the property had been turned over to Murphy, and that they were to hold it for him. The testimony introduced on the part of the defendant was: 1. The writ of attachment by virtue of which the property was levied upon; 2. The defendant was introduced as a witness, and testified as follows: “I took into my possession the property specified in this writ. I found two of the horses in Nelson Brothers’ corral; also two upon Indian creek, and two at Lufkin’s ranch. The balance were in the mountains between Greenhorn and Deer creeks. There were three on Deer creek, and two on Indian creek.” He said further: “I do not know of Kinney exercising any control over these horses except what I have heard. They were always called the ‘Kinney Horses.’” Peter Weber, on behalf of the defendant, swears: “I could not tell who had charge or control of these horses during the summer of 1890 -prior to the attachment. I think Jack Harris was a deputy here for a while, under Kinney, and worked for him. Jack Harris was working for Kinney, and looking after the mares, going back and forth, and keeping track of them.” Sutherland testified that Kinney claimed these horses during the summer of 1890; that “Kinney said the horses were his, and he did not want us to be running them around. We were chasing them around the barn, to drive them away.”

[?]*?The appellant contends that there was no such delivery of the property to Murphy as would constitute an immediate and continued change of possession, and quotes section 3021 of the statute, which is substantially as follows: “Every transfer of personal property, other than a thing in action, and every lien thereon, other than a mortgage, when allowed by law, is conclusively presumed. If made by a person having at the time the possession or control of the property, and not accompanied by an immediate delivery, and followed by an actual change of possession of the things transferred, to be fraudulent, and therefore void, against those who are his creditors while he remains in possession,” etc., and cites, in support of his contention, Bell v. McClellan, 67 Cal. 283, 7 Pac. 699. The facts in that case, however, were as follows: It appeared that some hay presses were the property of one Duncan, and were stored on the farm of one McNulty, his brother in law. Duncan sold the presses to the plaintiff, in satisfaction of the indebtedness then due from him to the plaintiff. Plaintiff received a bill of sale of the presses, and immediately wrote to McNulty stating that he had bought them from Duncan, and asking McNulty to hold them for him. Duncan gave McNulty no notice of the sale, and the presses remained in McNulty’s shed until the second day of June, following the sale, which was in January, when the plaintiff again wrote to McNulty, telling him to let Duncan take them and use them. Under this permission, Duncan took the presses, and had them repaired at the blacksmith-shop, and used them to bale hay on his own account, until the twenty* ninth day of August following. On the twenty-ninth day of August, Duncan and McNulty went to the plaintiff’s store at Oroville, and Duncan then told the plaintiff that he was sick, and did not want the presses any longer. The plaintiff then told McNulty to take them, and continue to bale hay with them for him (plaintiff). McNulty took the presses, and continued to bale hay with them for plaintiff until the 4th of September, when they were seized by the sheriff under a writ of attachment, at the suit of one Davidson v. Duncan. Under that state of facts, it was held that there was no sufficient delivery to the plaintiff, inasmuch as Duncan, the vendor, never directed Mc-Nulty, who had the presses in charge, to deliver them to the plaintiff, and they were never actually delivered to plaintiff [550]*550at all. No one ever gave McNulty any notice that the presses had been transferred to the plaintiff, except the plaintiff himself.

In the case at bar the evidence shows that, at the time of the pledge of the property to Murphy (the plaintiff), Kinney (pledgor), Murphy (the plaintiff) being present, called Nelson Brothers, who then had the property in their possession, to them, and Kinney then told Nelson Brothers that he had turned the property over to Murphy (the plaintiff); that they were to keep the property for him, and take them to the winter range for Murphy, to which all consented, all parties being present; that a portion of the horses were then in the corral of Nelson Brothers, to which place they had been gathered for the purpose of taking them to the winter range. The evidence shows, further, that Nelson Brothers took these horses to the winter ■range, and in the spring returned them, and delivered them to the plaintiff, Murphy, who paid for caring for them during the winter. This was the case with all the horses but two, which ■were in the possession of Lufkin. Lufkin was also notified by Kinney that he had transferred these horses to plaintiff, Mur,phy; that he was to keep them for him (plaintiff). The bills of sale were introduced in evidence, not for the purpose of showing ownership of the property in the plaintiff, Murphy, but as a part of the evidence showing that the property had been turned over to Murphy as a pledge for the indebtedness. For 'such purpose they were proper evidence. The fact that the -horses during the summer were looked after to some extent by 'an agent or employee of Kinney does not militate against the claim of Murphy that the property was pledged to him, and .was, as a matter of fact, in his possession. The fact that they ■were called the horses of Kinney is no evidence against the claim of Murphy.

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

Related

Isaak v. Journey
15 P.2d 1069 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1932)
Flood v. McClure
32 P. 254 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 P. 208, 3 Idaho 544, 3 Hasb. 544, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-braase-idaho-1893.