Hootman v. Bray

Decision Date31 January 1879
PartiesHOOTMAN, respondent, v. BRAY, appellant.
CourtMontana Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Second District, Beaver Head County.

C. W. TURNER, for appellant.

Defendant should have been allowed to file his amended answer, in furtherance of justice, on proper terms. Code of Civ. Proc., 1877, § 114; Kirstein v. Madden, 38 Cal. 163;Thomas v. Nelson, 69 N. Y. 119;Wormall v. Reins, 1 Mon. 630;Hartley v. Preston, 2 Id. 415.

Defendant's application for a new trial, on the ground of newly-discovered evidence, was in accordance with established principles.

The court erred in refusing testimony offered by defendants to show that vendor claimed title in himself down to the time of the attachment. 1 Greenl. Ev., § 462.

PATRICK TALENT, for respondent.

Questions of discretion of the court below cannot be reviewed in the supreme court, except in cases of gross abuse. Speck v. Hoyt, 3 Cal. 413;5 Id. 85.

Amendments after trial are allowed with great caution, and not without good cause shown. Van Santv. Pl. 814.

Defendant did not bring himself within the rule established by former decisions of this court.

Neither the proof nor the pleadings of defendant placed him in condition to assail the title of plaintiff. Thornburgh v. Hand, 7 Cal. 554.

The proposed amendment was not based upon any evidence given on the trial, but was a separate and distinct defense not allowed by any rules of pleading. Van Santv. Pl. 811-12.

There was abundant evidence to support the judgment, and courts will not set aside a judgment in such cases. Kile v. Tubbs, 32 Cal. 333.

A vendor is not a competent witness to impeach a sale made by himself. Howe v. Scannell, 8 Cal. 325;13 Id. 58;15 Id. 50.

Even the amended pleadings that defendant sought to file are fatally defective. Before an officer can seize property in possession of a stranger to the writ, he must plead specially in justification of such act all facts necessary to support the writ. Van Etten v. Hurst et al., 6 Hill, 311;Noble et al. v. Holmes, 5 Id. 195.

The pleading offered as amended contains no averment that an affidavit was made to justify the issuance of attachment. 7 Cal. 554.

WADE, C. J.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover the possession, as owner thereof, of certain personal property seized in attachment, by the sheriff of Beaver Head county, at the suit of Thomas and Armstrong, partners, against one Ephraim W. Sigsbee. The answer of the defendant denies the ownership and possession of plaintiff, and alleges that his interest in the property is that of a mortgagee by virtue of a certain mortgage executed by Sigsbee and wife to him on the 10th day of September, 1877, to secure the payment of a promissory note executed and delivered by Sigsbee to plaintiff on that day, for the sum of $1,387, and that the attachment was levied upon the property subject to such mortgage.

The replication of the plaintiff admits the levy of the attachment, and the execution and delivery of the mortgage as alleged, but denies that the same had any force or effect, for the reason that long before the levy of the attachment, to wit, on the 25th day of September, 1877, Sigsbee sold and delivered to the plaintiff all his interest in and to the mortgaged property for a valuable consideration, a part of which was the surrender of the Sigsbee note which the mortgage to plaintiff was given to secure, and that from that date until the levy of the attachment, the plaintiff had remained in the actual and continued possession of the property.

The cause was tried by the court sitting without a jury, and after the introduction of the testimony on both sides, and after the case had been substantially decided, the defendant presented an amendment to his answer, in which he attacked the sale from Sigsbee to plaintiff as fraudulent and void, and alleged an indebtedness from Sigsbee to the attaching creditors, which the original answer had failed to do, and asked leave to file the same, and to introduce proof in support thereof, which application to amend was refused by the court, and this refusal is assigned as error.

Neither the original answer nor the proposed amendment contain any averment showing that the attachment was regularly issued by a court having jurisdiction, and this we hold is a fatal defect, in a case like the one we are considering, where the plaintiff claims the...

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2 cases
  • Wise v. Jefferis
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Ninth Circuit
    • July 18, 1892
    ...creditors, without showing that all the preliminary proceedings were regular and sufficient to authorize the issuance of the writ. Hootman v. Bray, 3 Mont. 409; Ford McMaster, 6 Mont. 240, 11 P. 669; Marcum v. Coleman, 8 Mont. 196, 19 P. 394; Palmer v. McMaster, 10 Mont. 390, 25 P. 1056. Th......
  • Hale v. Forbis
    • United States
    • Montana Supreme Court
    • January 31, 1879

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