Beckwith v. Dierks Lumber & Coal Company

Decision Date20 December 1905
Docket Number14,059
Citation106 N.W. 442,75 Neb. 349
PartiesJOSEPH BECKWITH v. DIERKS LUMBER & COAL COMPANY
CourtNebraska Supreme Court

ERROR to the district court for Custer county: BRUNO O. HOSTETLER JUDGE. Affirmed.

AFFIRMED.

C. W Beal and H. J. Shinn, for plaintiff in error.

J. S Kirkpatrick, C. H. Holcomb, G. E. Hager and Milton Schwind, contra.

DUFFIE, C. ALBERT and JACKSON, CC., concur.

OPINION

DUFFIE, C.

The Dierks Lumber & Coal Company is the owner of a lot and building in the city of Broken Bow, Nebraska. A tenant erected a shed addition to this building and put a counter and some shelving therein. He afterwards sold all his right in the premises to Warner Brothers. Robinson, another tenant, occupied the building until some time in May, 1901, when he vacated, and the Dierks company then rented the same to one Dischous. In the meantime Beckwith, the plaintiff in error, commenced an action aided by attachment in a justice's court against Arthur and Joseph Warner and A. Wallace, obtained judgment, and had the shed, counter and shelving sold, himself becoming the purchaser. The Dierks company refusing to recognize his ownership, this action was brought for the value of the property and for rents. After the plaintiff had introduced his evidence, the court directed a verdict for the defendant, overruled a motion for a new trial, and entered judgment for costs against the plaintiff.

The judgment must be affirmed for several reasons. The petition fails to allege error in overruling the motion for a new trial. If the court did not err in overruling the plaintiff's motion for a new trial, it is evident that the judgment appealed from is the only one that could have been entered, and errors of law occurring at the trial, if any, were not prejudicial to the plaintiff. Again, no exception was taken to the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the defendant, and the conclusive presumption arises that plaintiff was satisfied with this instruction. Scofield v. Brown, 7 Neb. 221; Billings v. Filley, 21 Neb. 511, 32 N.W. 567; Gravely v. State, 45 Neb. 878, 64 N.W. 452. This rule is as applicable to peremptory instructions as to any other. Startzer v. Clarke, 1 Neb. Unoff. 91.

We think, also, on the merits the judgment should be affirmed. While the plaintiff claims title to the property under an attachment proceeding in a justice's court, there is no showing in the record that this...

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