Noyes v. Belding

59 N.W. 1069, 5 S.D. 603, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 102
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 59 N.W. 1069 (Noyes v. Belding) 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
Noyes v. Belding, 59 N.W. 1069, 5 S.D. 603, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 102 (S.D. 1894).

Opinion

Fuller, J.

On the 23rd day of September, 1881, Charles H. Knowles and Austin C. Marshman, co-partners as Knowles & Marshman, conveyed to William G. Knowles their stock of drugs and fixtures, with the fraudulent intent to hinder and delay their creditors. Four days thereafter, plaintiffs in this action brought suit against this firm to recover money due on account, and caused an attachment to issue, by virtue of which the property above mentioned was levied upon by the sheriff of Lawrence county, and taken into his possession. The value of the property so taken, according to the sheriff’s inventory returned into court, was $4^593.51. At *607 the suit of said William G. Knowles, in claim and delivery, soon afterwards instituted against the sheriff to recover the possession of the property so levied upon, the sale above mentioned was by the court, on the 6th day of January, 1892, adjudged to be fraudulent and void as to creditors; and the possession of such attached property was awarded to the defendant therein, John P. Belding, sheriff who afterwards released the same upon a claim for exemptions, and his action in so doing is one of the material issues involved in the case now before us. On the 22nd day of September, 1882, judgment was ’entered in the attachment suit, in favor of Noyes Bros. & Cutler, and against Knowles & Marshman, for $2,388.72, and execution was issued thereon, and returned wholly unsatisfied. This action was brought by appellants to recover from respondents $4,000, as damages claimed to have been sustained by reason of the alleged authorized release of said property by the sheriff, and his consequent inability to apply the proceeds thereof in satisfaction of said judgment. The complaint herein, after alleging the above-mentioned facts in the usual manner, and that said judgment remains in full force and unsatisfied, concludes as follows: “That while said warrant remained in full force and effect, and while said Belding still held in his possession thereunder, all of the goods so seized by him, to-wit, on or about June 15, 1882, the said defendant John P; Belding, upon the demand and request of the said Charles H. Knowles and Austin C. Marshman, and upon the further request of the defendants Alvin Pox, Robert Hood, Ben Baer, and John L. Baird, and in consideration of said last-mentioned request, and of the execution and delivery to him, the said Belding, by the defendants Alvin Fox, Robert Hood, Ben Baer, and John L. Baird, of their certain bond of indemnity, hereinafter mentioned, abandoned, released, surrendered, and delivered up to the said Charles H. Knowles and Austin C. Marsh-man all the goods and property so seized by him under and in obedience to the said warrant of attachment, and permitted *608 said attachment debtors to sell and dispose of said property to their own use; that the defendants Alvin Fox, Robert Hood, Ben Baer, and John L. Baird aided and abetted said Knowles & Marshman in procuring the surrender and delivery to them of said goods, and in taking and disposing of them to their own use, and counseled, advised, and requested said Belding thereto, and for the purpose of including'such surrender, and as a consideration therefor, did make, execute, and deliver to said Belding their certain bond of indemnity, wherein they undertook and agreed to indemnify and save harmless the said Belding from all loss or damage which he might incur or be compelled to pay by reason thereof; that on June 1, 1883, an execution was duly issued out of this court upon said judgment, which was on June 5, 1883, duly returned wholly unsatisfied; that said Knowles & Marshman had become, and were at the time of the rendition of said judgment and of the issuing of said execution, wholly insolvent, and said judgment still remains wholly unpaid and unsatisfied. Wherefore plaintiffs demand judgment against the defendants for $4,000 damages and costs. ”

The defendant Belding, in his separate and amended an- ■ swer, admits that the stock of drugs, together with the fixtures seized by him in the attachment proceedings, was inventoried and appraised at $4,593.51, but denies that the real value of the property exceeded $1,500, and alleges that the inventory was .hastily taken, and that the appraised value of said drugs and fixtures was greatly in excess of the real value of said property, and that the same, and the whole thereof, at the time of the seizing, was exempt from execution, and that, the defendants Knowles & Marshman having failed to claim their exemptions, the same were duly claimed by Margaret C. Knowles and Cora F. Marshman, the wives of said defendants, who chose the property levied upon, as exempt, and that the same was appraised in the manner provided by law, and the value thereof, according to the inventory of the duly-qualified ap *609 praisors, was less than $1,500; that said property was duly selected by the wives of said defendants, as exempt goods; that thereupon the codefendants of this defendant executed and delivered to him their joint and several bond, in which they, and each of them, undertook to indemnify this defendant against any damage by reason of the allowance of said demand for exemptions; that this defendant, on said claim, released and discharged all of said goods from the levy, and made his return to this court accordingly. Defendant,- in conclusion, denies on information and belief, the insolvency of Knowles & Marsh-man. In their amended answer the defendants Fox, Hood, Baer, and Baird, after alleging facts otherwise substantially similar to the foregoing, deny, on information and belief, the execution of the bond, and aver that if any paper was executed by them it was never used, and became no part of the consideration or inducement for the release by the sheriff of said goods. They also deny that the release of the goods was thus or otherwise induced by them.

There was a trial to a jury, and a verdict for defendants. From a.judgment entered thereon, and from an order over-ruling a motion for a new trial, plaintiffs appeal.

At the trial, and prior to the empaneling of the jury, counsel for plaintiffs moved the court to try separately the issues joined by the answer of the defendant Belding and those formed by the joint answer of the other defendants, and the ruling of the court in denying said motion is assigned as error. As a rule the granting or refusing to grant a separate trial is within the discretion of the court, and section 5035, Compiled Laws, provides that “a separate trial between a plaintiff and any of the several defendants may be allowed by the court, whenever in its opinion justice will be promoted.” The circumstances of this case were not, in our opinion, such as to subject plaintiffs to greater inconvenience than is usually experienced by parties called upon to try a case in which the re *610 lations of all the defendants to the party plaintiff are not entirely similar; and, as the ruling was within the sound discretion of the trial court it is not a subject for review.

Upon the ground, among others, that the record, if any existed, was the best evidence, counsel for defendants moved to strike from the deposition of Albert Allén, taken in narrative form on plaintiffs’ behalf, the following: “And then Granville G. Bennett, the attorney for Knowles & Marshman, sued out proceedings in mandamus against the sheriff to compel him to allow the exemption.

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.W. 1069, 5 S.D. 603, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noyes-v-belding-sd-1894.