Paul v. Cullum

8 P. 187, 2 Ariz. 16, 1885 Ariz. LEXIS 6
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1885
DocketCivil No. 135
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 P. 187 (Paul v. Cullum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul v. Cullum, 8 P. 187, 2 Ariz. 16, 1885 Ariz. LEXIS 6 (Ark. 1885).

Opinion

HOWARD, C. J.

This is an action brought by plaintiff to recover from the defendant the possession of certain goods, wares, and merchandise alleged to have been wrongfully taken by defendant from plaintiff, or for the sum of $35,000, the alleged value thereof, in case delivery cannot be had. The answer contains denials of the allegations of the complaint, and a further and separate answer and defense, alleging that defendant, as sheriff of Pina county, had seized and taken possession of the goods, etc., under an attachment issued from the district court of Pima county in. the case of G. Howard Thompson v. Lord & Williams, further alleging that goods, etc., were, at the time of seizure, in possession of and the property of Lord & Williams. The ease was tried by the court without a jury.

The court found substantially that on the twenty-fifth day of October, 1881, the goods, etc., in question were the property of the firm of Lord & Williams Company, composed of C. H. Lord, W. W. Williams, and C. E. Harlow, and that on that day said firm made a general assignment of all their property not exempt from execution to plaintiff, for the equal benefit of all their creditors, and plaintiff accepted said assignment and received said goods, etc., from said firm, and took possession thereof, and that said assignment was made in good faith; that defendant, as sheriff of Pima county, on the twenty-eighth day of October, 1881, seized and took said goods, etc., from the possession of plaintiff under an attachment that day issued from the district court of Pima county in the case of G. Howard Thompson v. Lord & Williams; that said property, when so seized and attached, was the property of plaintiff, and not subject to-such seizure or attachment, and that the value thereof was $35,000.

. The court found, as conclusions of law, substantially that the said goods, etc., were wrongfully taken and detained by [22]*22the defendant from the possession of plaintiff, and that plaintiff was entitled to a judgment for the return of said proj>erty, and if the same cannot be made, for the sum of $35,000 against defendant. A judgment was entered upon their finding in the following words:

“The court having this day signed and filed its findings of fac;t and conclusions of law in this case, and the value of the property claimed having been found by the court to be the sum of thirty-nine thousand dollars, and the property claimed having been taken into possession of the plaintiff, therefore it is adjudged that the plaintiff have and retain possession of the personal property described in the complaint with the costs,” etc.

The case is brought up on appeal from the judgment alone. There was no statement on motion for a new trial. The record contains the judgment roll, a statement on appeal signed by attorneys for plaintiff and defendant, and defendant’s specification of errors. The statement on appeal sets out evidence given at the trial without purporting to contain all the evidence given at the trial. We will now proceed to notice defendant’s specification of errors:

1. “The court erred in refusing to sustain the objection made by defendant to the introduction of the power of attorney offered by the plaintiff.” There is nothing in the record showing this to have been error. The power of attorney was duly authenticated and was pertinent, and was part of plaintiff’s evidence of title.

2. “The court erred in permitting the articles of agreement of the partnership between Lord & Williams Company to be read in evidence against defendant’s objection.” The record shows no error in this. The agreement was a part of plaintiff’s evidence of title, and was duly proved.

3. “The court erred in admitting in evidence the assignment made by Lord & Williams Company to plaintiff Cullum against defendant’s objection.” The record shows no error in this. The assignment was a part of plaintiff’s evidence of title, and was duly proved. ->

4. “The court erred in refusing to grant the motion made by defendant to strike out the testimony introduced by plaintiff in the case on the ground of variance between it and the allegations of the complaint.”

[23]*235. “The court erred in refusing to pass upon and grant defendant’s motion for a nonsuit made on the conclusion of plaintiff’s ease, on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to make out his cause of action as alleged in his complaint.” The record shows that these two specifications of error, as well as the- first three, were based on an assumption by defendant that because plaintiff in his' complaint had sued simply in his individual capacity, without showing his character as assignee, that therefore he should not be permitted to give in evidence the several instruments going to show title invested in him as assignee. The question raisd is whether this assignee, after he had taken possession of the personal property conveyed to him by the deed of assignment, and has been wrongfully deprived thereof by a third party, can sue in his personal capacity to recover possession of the property, or whether he is bound to sue in his representative capacity. The authorities leave no doubt on this question. It is expressly held in Hogland v. Trask, 48 N. Y. 686, and Ogden v. Prentice, 33 Barb. 160, that an assignee may sue either in his personal or representative capacity. It is a familiar rule that an executor or administrator, after he has reduced the goods of the estate to his possession, and has then been wrongfully deprived of them, may sue for the recovery thereof in his individual capacity. It is clear that the record shows no such errors as are claimed in fourth and fifth specifications of error.

6. “The defendant assigns as further ground of error the insufficiency of said findings to warrant or support the judgment in favor of plaintiff, on the ground that said findings show that the plaintiff H. B. Cullum, he’d said property by virtue of the assignment of Lord & Williams Company, and as trustee for the purpose of paying the creditors of said firm; that at the time of the levying of the attachment in the case of Thompson v. Lord & Williams by the defendant herein, by virtue of which he took possession of said goods, etc., no creditor of .said firm had assented to said assignment or become a party thereto in any way.” It is a sufficient answer to this specification of error to say that the findings nowhere show that at the time of the levy of the attachment “no creditor of the firm had assented to said assignment or [24]*24become a party thereto in any way.” We will add, however, that in the case of a general voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors without preference, and without restrietions, as the record shows this to have been, in the absence of proof of dissent, the law presumes the assent of the creditors to the assignment for their benefit. Grover v. Wakeman, 1 Amer. Lead. Cas. 72; Nicoll v. Munford, 4 Johns. Ch. 523, 529.

7. Also that there is no evidence that at the time of making of the said assignment there were any creditors of Lord & Williams Company, for whose benefit said assignment was made, and said Cullum claimed to hold said property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 P. 187, 2 Ariz. 16, 1885 Ariz. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-v-cullum-ariz-1885.