Campbell v. Quackenbush
Decision Date | 18 January 1876 |
Citation | 33 Mich. 287 |
Court | Michigan Supreme Court |
Parties | Harriet Campbell v. John Quackenbush |
Submitted on Briefs January 13, 1876
Error to Hillsdale Circuit.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.
E. L & M. B. Koon, for plaintiff in error.
George A. Knickerbocker, for defendant in error.
The controversy here relates to the title of a span of horses. The defendant in error claims them by virtue of a chattel mortgage given by Harvey Campbell, the husband of the plaintiff in error. Harvey Campbell lived with his wife on her farm, and the horses were there, and in use. Quackenbush, claiming that a breach had occurred in the condition of the mortgage, replevied the horses without previously making any demand for them. The court below held that no demand was necessary.
We think this was erroneous. The horses were rightfully on the farm, and Mrs. Campbell, who was the owner of the farm, could not be deemed wrongfully in possession until she had refused on demand to surrender them. Her claim that she owned them was not in itself a wrongful act, and could not subject her to a suit. The mortgagee of her husband was at least bound to present his claim and see whether she would recognize it or not, before he could lawfully subject her to the costs of a suit.
We are referred, in support of the ruling, to Trudo v. Anderson, 10 Mich. 357; but in that case the possession of the defendant was, as to the plaintiff, a wrongful possession. In this case the horses had remained where they were left by the mortgagee himself in taking his security, and the only change that had taken place in the position of any of the parties was that which had occurred in the absconding of Harvey Campbell. But this of itself could not make the wife a wrong-doer: if she was not a wrong-doer by reason of the horses being on her farm before his absconding, she was not so afterwards until some affirmative action had been taken by her. The case of Ballou v. O'Brien, 20 Mich. 304, to which we are also referred, was, like the previous case, one of wrongful possession.
As this will dispose of the case on a new trial, it seems hardly necessary to go farther; but it may be proper to say that much evidence was received of what had been done by the husband and said by him in other cases, which was entirely incompetent. Testimony of that nature could not be received against this defendant unl...
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