Waldie v. Doll

29 Cal. 555
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 Cal. 555 (Waldie v. Doll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waldie v. Doll, 29 Cal. 555 (Cal. 1866).

Opinion

By the Court, Currey, C. J.

On the 12th of November, 1864, J. Gf. Doll commenced an action in the Distinct Court of the Sixth Judicial District against one J. P. Shaffer to recover the amount due on two promissory notes, and caused to be attached therein three wagons as security for the satisfaction of any judgment that he might recover in such action. Subsequently in the s.ame month judgment was obtained in the suit against Shaffer for-seven hundred and thirteen dollars, and thereafter an execution was issued thereon, and on the 8th of December of the same year the property attached was sold to Doll by the Sheriff of Sacramento County under and by virtue of the judgment and execution against Shaffer. The plaintiff, Waldie, claimed the wagons, and after they were sold and delivered to Doll demanded them of him, and upon his refusal to deliver the property in compliance with such demand, the plaintiff brought this action for their recovery, or their valué in case the possession thereof.could not be obtained, and for damages, etc.

The plaintiff’s complaint consists of two counts. In one of them the plaintiff alleges that he was the owner and in pos[557]*557session of the wagons at the time they came to the defendant’s possession. In the other he alleges that he and Shaffer were the owners in common of certain personal property consisting of three wagons, and that Shaffer, being indebted to him in the sum of five hundred dollars with some interest thereon, pledged his interest in these wagons to the plaintiff to secure said indebtedness and the interest, and at the same time placed the property in the actual possession and under the exclusive control of the plaintiff, and also invested him with full power to sell and dispose of the same and to apply the proceeds arising therefrom to the payment of the amount due and to become due. In each count the property therein described is alleged to be of the value in the aggregate of one thousand dollars. Two of the wagons mentioned in the first count correspond in description with two of the wagons described in the second count, but it does not appear from the complaint that the two counts were intended to describe the same property, but from the whole complaint it is evident the plaintiff intended the second count as a statement of the cause of action on which he relied for a recovery.

The defendant’s answer controverts most of the material allegations of the complaint. The defendant further answering avers that the property was seized and taken by the Sheriff under the writ of attachment and afterward came to the defendant’s possession by purchase at the sale under the execution. And he alleges that when the wagons were so seized and taken by the Sheriff, Shaffer had the actual possession of them and was the owner of one half part thereof and so continued to be until they were sold by the Sheriff to the defendant, who by his purchase became the owner of one half of the property, and equally with the plaintiff became entitled to the possession of the same; that immediately after he so purchased he offered to the plaintiff to recognize him as the owner of an undivided half of the wagons in common with himself. He then charges that the pretended pledging of the property was a fraudulent contrivance on the part of Shaffer to enable him, with the assistance of the plaintiff, to [558]*558cheat and defraud his creditors, and further that such pretended pledging was void as against the defendant for want of an actual delivery and change of the possession of the property or any part thereof. The issue joined was tried before a jury who rendered a verdict for the plaintiff on which judgment was entered.

The appeal is from the judgment and from an order refusing a new trial.

In October, 1862, Shaffer, who was a wagon maker, engaged in the business of making wagons at the shop of the plaintiff in the City of Sacramento. By an arrangement between the plaintiff and Shaffer, the latter was to do the woodwork, and the former, who was a blacksmith, was to do the ironwork necessary to the construction of the wagons, after which it was a part of the business of Shaffer to paint them. Shaffer had not the means with which to procure the materials necessary for his part of. the work; and the result was, that plaintiff furnished timber and money to Shaffer for the purpose, upon the agreement that plaintiff should have and hold the wagons until, by the moneys arising from sales thereof, he should be reimbursed for his advancements made on behalf of Shaffer. The agreement between the parties, as testified to by the plaintiff, was, that Shaffer should carry on the wagon making business and the plaintiff the blacksmithing business, and that Shaffer should have for his own use and benefit the business of repairing wagons, and that the new wagons to be built by their joint labor should belong to the plaintiff until he was fully paid the money due him. The plaintiff further testified that he advanced to Shaffer five hun-' dred dollars’ worth of timber in October, 1862, and thereafter all the additional timber used by him in the business. Some time before the attachment was levied, Shaffer sold out his interest in the wagons to one Keseberg, when he instructed the plaintiff' that if the wagons were sold for more than was due him, that then the plaintiff should pay the excess belonging to Shaffer to Keseberg, and to this the plaintiff assented. Shaffer testified in effect that he was to have a half interest in [559]*559the wagons when the materials of which they were made were paid for, and that from his half the five hundred dollars due the plaintiff was to be deducted. The evidence of the witnesses is exceedingly loose in respect to the exact relation which the parties to this wagon making business sustained to each other by their original agreement or understanding. The theory upon which the action was tried was, that Shaffer and Waldie, in the first place, contemplated by their arrangement that they should own in common the wagons which they might make, and so the respective attorneys of the parties to this action seemed in their pleadings to regard the position of the contracting parties, and so we shall regard it. Then the substance and effect of the arrangement between the plaintiff and Shaffer was, that the wagons in question should, to the extent of Shaffer’s interest therein, stand pledged to the plaintiff, as soon as manufactured, as security for the money due and to become due. This arrangement was in .its nature a contract for the hypothecation of the wagons as they should be brought into being by the labor and skill of the workmen; but as soon as they came into existence and passed into the possession of the plaintiff, his right as pledgee of Shaffer’s half attached. So it was held in the case of Macomber v. Parker, 14 Pick. 497, where a brickmaker stipulated with the lessees of a brick yard, in which he manufactured bricks, that the lessees should retain the bricks to be made there as security for their advances to him. (Story on Bail, Secs. 290, 294.)

As between the plaintiff and Shaffer, there can be no question as to which was entitled to the possession of the wagons and to the proceeds of sales thereof in the first instance. The plaintiff had the right to their possession, and the authority to sell them and to appropriate from the money arising from the half which stood pledged, sufficient, if it amounted to that, to pay him the sum due. Then the main question to be considered is whether the possession which the plaintiff had of the property when it was attached was open and exclusive, and such as to protect it from the creditor of Shaffer.

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

Related

People v. Brown
81 P.2d 463 (California Court of Appeal, 1938)
Territory of Arizona v. Harper
1 Ariz. 399 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Cal. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldie-v-doll-cal-1866.