William Johnson Land & Live Stock Co. v. Harris
This text of 231 P. 1095 (William Johnson Land & Live Stock Co. v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
*315 OPINION
By the Court,
The William Johnson Land and Live Stock Company, a Nevada corporation, brought this action of claim and delivery to recover possession of 25 bags of wool, 2 tons of alfalfa seed, 340 tons of hay, 80 head of cattle, 50 thoroughbred sheep, and 200 grade sheep, which the defendant, J. C. Harris, while acting as sheriff of Elko County, justified taking upon a writ of execution issued from the district court of that county upon a judgment rendered in favor of Bank of Wells v. Alma Thueson for the sum of $3,147.82. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the possession of the property. The defendant appeals from said judgment and from an order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
Without reviewing the pleadings or going into the evidence except in so far as it may be necessary to make clear the conclusion we have reached, we are of opinion that in this, as in any case of claim and delivery, the action merely determines the right of possession at the time of the commencement of the action. In an action to recover personal property it is necessary for the plaintiff to show that he is entitled to immediate possession. Hilger v. Edwards, 5 Nev. 84; Azparren v. Ferrel, 44 Nev. 157, 191 P. 571, 11 A. L. R. 678; 23 R. C. L. 866. In such action the claimant is not called upon to establish ownership; merely a. right to the immediate possession of. the property is sufficient. Parke v. Franciscus (Cal. Sup.) 228 P. 435. The action is essentially a possessory one, and ownership is only incidental to the main issue. Cobbey on Replevin (2d ed.), sec. 91.
In the present case it is argued on behalf of the *316 defendant that the plaintiff’s claimed right to the possession of the property is founded solely upon its alleged ownership thereof, and, plaintiff having failed to establish title to the property, such failure carried with it its claimed right to possession. Conceding, but not deciding, that the plaintiff’s right to the immediate possession of the property is founded upon its alleged ownership and right to possession, we are of opinion that, since the trial court expressly found that the judgment under which the defendant justified was void as to the plaintiff, the defendant is in no position to assail plaintiff’s title to the property as being fraudulent as against Thueson’s creditors. Where a sheriff justifies under an execution and seeks to attack the title of the plaintiff in replevin on the ground of fraud, the plaintiff being a stranger to the judgment upon which the execution is based, the sheriff must show that his execution was issued upon a valid subsisting judgment. Wyatt v. Freeman, 4 Colo. 14; Cobbey, sec. 806. The judgment under which the defendant. justified having been declared void, there was no foundation for the defendant or any one claiming under him to attack plaintiff’s title as fraudulent. Wilson v. Martin, 44 Mich. 509, 7 N. W. 83. For the same reason we are of opinion that the defendant is in no position to assert and contend that the agreement by virtue of which the plaintiff acquired its right or claim to the property is ■within our statute of frauds. Section 1078, Revised Laws.
The court found the facts and circumstances in connection with and attendant upon Alma Thueson’s confession of judgment in favor of the Bank of Wells were such that the judgment and execution under which the defendant justified was void as to the plaintiff. This question, was one peculiarly within the province of the court sitting as a jury to determine. The court having found upon conflicting evidence the judgment to be void, and there being some testimony of a substantial nature to support the finding, we are in no position to disturb it. Assuming, then, the correctness *317 of the finding, the plaintiff is entitled to the possession of the property, providing it proved its right to it. Feusier v. Lammon, 6 Nev. 209.
In this case plaintiff leased its ranch and stock to one Alma Thueson on such terms that plaintiff' had a one-half interest in the products raised on the ranch and the increase of the stock during the term, which was for a period of three years from December 1, 1917. The lower court found upon conflicting evidence that the lease was carried on by one O. J. Hutchinson and said Alma Thueson as copartners under the firm name of Hutchinson & Thueson; that the firm in carrying on the lease became indebted to plaintiff for the value of a number of tons of hay and other products furnished and money loaned during the term; that, while so indebted, and while in the occupancy of the premises and in possession of the property in controversy, the firm of Hutchinson & Thueson, within a few months of the end of the term, to wit, in October, 1920, entered into an agreement with plaintiff whereby it was understood and agreed that the firm would turn over and deliver to plaintiff all the property in controversy, and that the plaintiff would sell all or any portion of the firm’s undivided one-half thereof and from the proceeds of said sale the plaintiff would pay the firm’s indebtedness to it and return the balance, if any remained, to the firm. The property was delivered, and plaintiff took possession thereof in accordance with said agreement, and, while so possessed, the defendant as sheriff wrongfully and unlawfully seized and took possession of the property, and wrongfully and unlawfully detained the same.
Counsel for the respective parties argue that the agreement of October, 1920, constituted a sale or a pledge of the property. There are no words of sale in the agreement; nor is there anything in it indicating an intention on the part of the firm to transfer to plaintiff the ownership of its undivided one-half of the property, but, on the contrary, we find stipulations in it utterly inconsistent with such intention. Thus it is provided in *318 the agreement that the plaintiff have the custody and control of the property and sell all or any portion of the firm’s half thereof and apply the proceeds of sale to the payment of the firm’s indebtedness to plaintiff and account to the firm for the balance, if any, thereafter remaining from said sale. There are certainly no words in the agreement which indicate an intention on the part of the firm to transfer the property to plaintiff in pledge as security for its indebtedness to plaintiff. It is obvious from its stipulations that the plaintiff was to have full and entire control of the sale of the property, and that there was imposed upon the owners the duty to. deliver the property to plaintiff, and upon plaintiff the duty to sell all or any portion of the firm’s half for the purpbse stated, and to account to the firm for'the proceeds of said sale. There could be no effectual sale without delivery of the property, and there could bé no delivery of possession if the property was not in plaintiff’s custody or control, or, in other words, in its actual possession. As between the parties the agreement was executed. It may be that the agreement gave plaintiff a money interest in the property, but as to this the lower court made no decision or finding.
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231 P. 1095, 48 Nev. 312, 1925 Nev. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-johnson-land-live-stock-co-v-harris-nev-1925.