Perfect Knitting Mills v. Obstfeld
This text of 154 Ill. App. 637 (Perfect Knitting Mills v. Obstfeld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment for the defendants in replevin. The declaration alleged the taking and detaining by defendants of a large number of sweaters and a quantity of yarn, and contained a count in trover for the same property. All of the property was taken on the writ and delivered to plaintiff. The pleas by all of the defendants were, (1) non cepit, (2), non detinet, and (3) not guilty to the count in trover. Defendant, M. Obstfeld, pleaded property in himself and plaintiff replied traversing the plea.
The jury retured the following verdict: “We the jury find the defendants not guilty and that the right to the possession of the property in question is in the defendants and assess the defendants’ damages for the detention of said property at the sum of $250.” Defendants remitted $249.99 of the damages, and the court denied plaintiff’s motion for a new trial and entered judgment that the defendants recover from the plaintiff the property replevied, and the one cent damages by the jury assessed and their costs, and that a writ of retorno habendo issue for the return of said property.
The special plea of M. Obstfeld is in effect a special traverse of the averment in the declaration of right of property in the plaintiff, and the allegation of right of property in said defendants is merely inducement to such traverse and is not even traversable. The issue made on such plea of property in defendants does not involve the absolute ownership of the goods. It is sufficient if the plaintiff has a special interest in the property entitling him to the present possession. Cleaves v. Herbert, 61 Ill. 126. Under such a plea the plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title and the burden of proof is on him to establish his right. Reynolds v. McCormick, 62 Ill. 412; Grotloff v. Henry, 14 Ill. 384. The verdict finds substantially that the plaintiff had not the right to the possession of the property by finding that the right to the possession was in the defendants.
It is no just ground of complaint of the plaintiff that the finding was that the right of possession was in the defendants, when only M. Obstfeld had pleaded property in himself, or that a return of the property to all of the defendants was ordered by the judgment. Defendant, M. Obstfeld, alone could complain of that. Grotloff v. Henry, supra.
The evidence is conflicting and we cannot say that the jury might not properly find that the plaintiff, was not entitled to the possession of the nroperty Iff controversy.
No material error appearing in the record the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
154 Ill. App. 637, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perfect-knitting-mills-v-obstfeld-illappct-1910.