Wipperman Mercantile Co. v. Robbins

135 N.W. 785, 23 N.D. 208, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 76
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 135 N.W. 785 (Wipperman Mercantile Co. v. Robbins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wipperman Mercantile Co. v. Robbins, 135 N.W. 785, 23 N.D. 208, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 76 (N.D. 1912).

Opinions

Goss, J.

The plaintiff corporation herein seeks to recover the value of certain property, claimed to be owned by it, but levied upon under attachment and sold on judgment rendered in an action between Gold-stein and Kuhlberg, as judgment creditors, against the Peter Fox Sons Company, as judgment debtors. This action arises out of such alleged wrongful levy on the property of the plaintiff, and turns on the issue of ownership and right of possession of the property as attached. If title had been vested by the Wipperman Mercantile Company, prior to the attachment in the Peter Fox Sons Company, and thereunder possession of the property had been delivered to said company, so it became the owner with right of possession and disposition thereof in it, the attachment was levied upon its property, and this plaintiff must fail in this action. On the contrary, if title to such property or its possession, or right of disposition at the time of the levy, remained in this plaintiff with no delivery had, the defendant officer must respond in damages, as the levy would then be wrongful.

The complaint sounds in conversion. The answer is a general denial, coupled with a justification by levy under attachment and sale pursuant to final judgment in an action between such third parties. Tx-ial was had to a jury with a verdict for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals, assigning error falling under general classifications regarding the admission and exclusion of testimony and instructions to the jury complained of.

To an intelligent understanding of this opinion it is necessary to state the following uncontroverted facts before considering the error assigned: This case is a sequel to that recently decided by this court, wherein Abe Goldstein and I. Kuhlberg, as plaintiffs, recovered judgment against the Peter Fox Sons Company, and in which the property here concerned was attached by said plaintiffs as the property of the Peter Fox Sons Company. Plaintiff’s third party claim to the property was therein ignored, and it now seeks to recover of the defendants the value of the carload of chickens so taken in the other action. When attached the property was in a car at Hankinson. It consisted of 12,000 pounds of poultry of a value of about $1,100. The property had been accumulated during a period of about two weeks and paid for by this plaintiff. The poultry was brought to the car, in which was an employee of the plaintiff, who would issue duebills to the seller, who, upon presentation of the [211]*211same to plaintiff, received payment. The purchases so made were for a resale of the poultry to the Foxes, under the following: “This agreement entered into by and between the Wipperman Mercantile Company and the Peter Fox Sons Company, whereby they agree to accept a car of mixed poultry to be taken in on November 5th, at the following prices (scheduled) f. o. b. Hankinson.” The poultry was so purchased at various times from October 14th to November 7, 1908, inclusive. During that period the Foxes gave plaintiff a draft for $600 as an advancement under the transaction, and this amount was used in the purchase of the poultry. Anthony Fox was at the car during part of this time, and on November 7th was in and about the car preparatory to his accompanying it to Chicago, to which place Fox was making shipment after delivery at Hankinson under the agreement. Two employees of plaintiff, Henry Wipperman and Blonagan, on November 7th, until noon, were working in the car at purchasing poultry and loading it therein, getting the car ready for delivery to Fox that noon, that he might bill it out and accompany it to Chicago. Fox had placed in the car certain property he desired to ship in the car, consisting of his personal belongings and about 200 dead wild ducks, the latter in two barrels, and a lunch with liquid refreshments, for use en route. Fox had just interviewed the station agent about billing out the car, and the employees in the car had nearly finished loading it, when the sheriff appeared and levied on the contents of the car as the property of the Fox Company. Fox at the time claimed to own the property, and made various statements to that effect in the hearing of defendant’s employees, who did not disaffirm such averments of ownership made by Fox. The levy was made at noon, Saturday, November 7, 1908.

During that night Fox and M. A. Wipperman, manager of the plaintiff corporation, together made a trip by automobile to Wahpeton to consult attorneys, returning after midnight. The car on which was the sheriff’s levy stood some 50 feet in the rear of the Wipperman Mercantile Company building and place of business, and that night, and prior to 4 o’clock in the morning, the car was burglarized, and the wild game, the dead ducks, taken therefrom through the back doors of plaintiff’s building, which doors were fastened by bars on the inside and could be opened only after entrance into the building from elsewhere. This wild game was found by the sheriff the next morning, in the second [212]*212story of plaintiff’s building, in a room used as a cooling room for undertaking purposes. Certain testimony was offered and received tending to prove an admission by Fox of knowledge or participation in burglarizing tbe car and removing a part of tbe contents. It is further established that, while these parties were at Wahpeton, plaintiff gave Fox a check to repay the $600 advance by draft Fox had made to the corporation. M. A. Wipperman explains this as having'been made necessary because of Fox’s threat to stop payment of the $600 draft previously given and of which the $600 advancement to plaintiff consisted; and for the additional reason that Fox refused to accept the car because it was not fully loaded; and thus under plaintiff’s claim the Foxes withdrew their money and all interest in the matter, leaving it to future litigation between Goldstein & Kuhlberg, attaching creditors of Fox, and the Wipperman Mercantile Company as owner of the property attached. The testimony about the loading by Fox of the wild game in the car, and the levy thereon, and the burglary of the car and its removal therefrom, as well as all statements made by Fox tending to show his ownership or control of the car, or his intent to bill the same out, together with the trip to Wahpeton and all proceeding subsequent to the levy, were each and all received over objection, upon which, and certain testimony excluded with the court’s instructions to the jury, are predicated the assignments of error.

We will first consider the alleged objectionable testimony consisting of declarations by Fox of ownership and possession. These were received after the method of purchase had been shown, and after other testimony tending to and placing in dispute the fact of who had possession and ownership of the property levied upon, and as a part of the proceedings had and occurring at the time of the levy. The objection urged is that such is hearsay testimony. The specific testimony thus admitted consists in the following rehearsal of what took place at the time of the levy. The sheriff at the time of the levy, in the presence of Henry Wipperman and Fox, spoke to one Blonagan, regarding Avhich he was asked: “Q. What did you say to Blonagan, and Avhat did he say to you ?” To which the objection of hearsay as to plaintiff was made and overruled, and the answer made: “I asked if that Avas his car of poultry, and he said it belonged to Fox.” After which ruling the witness stated: “dust about then Fox looked up and asked me if I had any [213]*213poultry to sell. I told him, ‘No;’ at the same time Blonagan told him I was the city marshal, and didn’t have any poultry to sell. I told him.

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Related

State v. Greiner
207 N.W. 226 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1926)
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158 N.W. 998 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 N.W. 785, 23 N.D. 208, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wipperman-mercantile-co-v-robbins-nd-1912.