Schofield v. Territory of New Mexico ex rel. American Valley Co.

9 N.M. 526, 9 Gild. 526
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1899
DocketNo. 771
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 N.M. 526 (Schofield v. Territory of New Mexico ex rel. American Valley Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schofield v. Territory of New Mexico ex rel. American Valley Co., 9 N.M. 526, 9 Gild. 526 (N.M. 1899).

Opinion

MILLS, C. J.

This suit was brought on an attachment bond. The plaintiffs in error gave an attachment bond, in the statutory form, and sued out a writ of attachment against the American Valley Company. At the time of the delivery of the writ, the attorneys for Schofield wrote the sheriff of Socorro county, giving him instructions as to the course he was to follow in levying it. That part of the instructions which is pertinent to this case, is as follows:

“I hereby instruct you to levy said writ of attachment in the first mentioned case against the American Yalley Company, upon all the real estate of said company, the title to which stands of record in its name upon the record in the recorder’s office of the county of Socorro, and also levy upon the cattle and other personal property standing in the name of said company by complying with the provisons of the act of the legislative assembly for 1889, page 111, entitled an act' relating to the service of writs of attachment and replevin or executions on live stock. You will take possession of some of the stock belonging to said company and the balance which you can not reasonably round up, you may levy upon by filing with the clerk of the probate court a certified copy of said writ in accordance with said act.”

In executing the writ the sheriff levied upon the property of the American Yalley Company, and rounded up and took into his actual possession during the latter part of March and the first part of April, 1894, about one thousand head of cattle, between sixty and seventy horses, four mules, and other personal property. These he held for some days, when acting on orders of the attorneys for the plaintiff in error, he turned the cattle loose on the range and surrendered possession of the other live stock. The affidavit on which the attachment was based was traversed, and the issue thus raised came on for trial, and the court instructed the jury to find the issues in favor of the defendant, the American Valley Company. The facts developed in that case appear in the decision given in Schofield v. American Valley Company, which has already been decided at this term of court. After the dissolution of the attachment, the American Yalley Company brought this action against Schofield, and the other sureties on the bond. A trial was had in Socorro county in January of the present year, and the jury found a verdict in favor of the American Yalley Company, and assessed damages in the sum of ten thousand dollars.- Special findings requested by the defendant were made by the jury. The defendants below, plaintiffs in error herein, filed a motion for a new trial, and the court on March 24, 1898, granted said motion, conditionally, that the American Yalley Company did not remit three thousand dollars of the damages awarded by the jury. This sum the American Yalley Company did remit, and the motion for new trial was overruled, and judgment entered for the sum of seven thousand dollars. From this jxidgment a writ of error was sued out, and on the errors assigned the case is now before us for review.

The assignment of errors alleges error: (1) That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the plaintiff to the answer of the defendants to the first paragraph of the de-. fendant’s answer and striking out the same (2) that it erred in admitting illegal and improper testimony over the exception and objection of plaintiffs in error, at the trial before the jury; (3) that it erred in excluding the introduction of legal and proper evidence offered by plaintiffs in error at said trial; (4) that it erred in admitting as evidence testimony as to the value of the cattle attached under the -writ, other than the difference in the market value of said cattle at the time of the attachment and the time of the release of the same; (5) that it erred .in admitting as evidence, testimony as to what the cattle seized under the writ of attachment were worth to the defendant in error, instead of limiting the issue to the market value of the cattle at the time and place when and where, they were seized; (6) that it erred in admitting evidence of the value of the cattle seized at times other than the date when the cattle were seized and released by. the plaintiffs in said attachment suit; .(7) that it erred in instructing the jury; (8) that it erred in refusing to give the instructions asked by the plaintiffs in error; (9) that the verdict was contrary to the evidence; (10) that the verdict was contrary to the law; (11) that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence; (12) that it erred in refusing to sustain the motion for a new trial; (13) that it erred in refusing to set aside the general verdict and render a verdict in behalf of plaintiffs in error, upon the special findings of the jury; (14) that it erred in overruling the motion for a new trial and in permitting the defendants to enter a remittitur in the sum of $3,000; (15) that the court should instead of permitting the entry of the remittitur for $3,000 have granted a new trial, and (16) that the court erred in permitting counsel for the defendants in error to quote from section 2 of the act relating to the serving of writs of attachment, replevin or execution on live stock, laws of 1889, and comment thereon.

A pleading:'waiver, The first point which presents itself under these assignments is as to whether or not the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the plaintiff to the first paragraph of the answer of the defendant and in striking it out. This paragraph was:

“That the said attachment writ alleged to have been sued out by said declaration, was sued out by the plaintiff in said attachment suit, John "W. Schofield, receiver of the Albuquerque National Bank, in a suit brought against the plaintiff, the American Yalley Company, upon the ground that the defendant in said attachment suit was removing its property from the territory of New Mexico,. and was sued out with probable cause or belief that such removal was for the purpose of evading the payment of the indebtedness due and owing from said defendant in said attachment suit to the plaintiff therein, in the sum of to wit: $17,580 which said indebtedness was past due and owing to the said plaintiff therein.”

The demurrer of the defendant in error to this paragraph was that it “attempts to raise an issue which has already been disposed of in the case in which the writ of attachment was quashed, dissolved and dismissed, and which would be immaterial.”

After argument, this demurrer was sustained, and the paragraph was stricken out, defendants below excepting, and leave was given Schofield to file an amended answer, leaving out said paragraph, which he did. The amended answer wap likewise demurred to, but this demurrer was overruled.

damages : mitiganon: livestock. Defendant in error contends that as, after demurrer was sustained, the defendants pleaded over, omitting tbe objectionable paragraph, they thereby waived any right to object to the ruling of the court, as they thereby abandoned their first answer, and substituted a different one, on which they went to trial. We do not consider this point as well taken. The defendants below, having excepted to the ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrer, saved their right to have such ruling passed upon, on final appeal of the case; by answering over they did not lose such right. This point was decided in the case of Teal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 242

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 N.M. 526, 9 Gild. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schofield-v-territory-of-new-mexico-ex-rel-american-valley-co-nm-1899.