Citation Numbers: 26 Idaho 322, 143 P. 402
Judges: Sullivan, Truitt
Filed Date: 9/23/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 1/2/2022
In this ease an action of claim,and delivery was brought by appellant against respondent to recover the possession of a note for $1,800 and a mortgage upon certain real property in Canyon county, Idaho, given to secure the same.
On or about October 1, 1912, the appellant, Frank J. Smith, sold to one Dan Bamidge a certain stock of merchandise, saloon fixtures and liquors, located at 702 Main St., Boise, Idaho. This note and mortgage were a part of the purchase price of said personal property, and at the time of the commencement of said action they were in the possession of the defendant, and he admitted that the plaintiff was the owner of them. The defendant filed his answer to the complaint and affidavit of the plaintiff, denying certain allegations therein but admitting the sale of the personal property to said Dan Bamidge by plaintiff, that said note and mortgage
Said defendant, as a further answer, defense and cross-complaint, among other things, alleged that “on or about the 28th day of August, 1912, the said plaintiff, Frank J. Smith, entered into 'an agreement with the said defendant, W. A. Bergstresser, wherefor, in the consideration of $200 to be paid by the said plaintiff to the said defendant, the said defendant agreed to negotiate the sale of, sell and dispose of a certain stock of merchandise and fixtures, consisting of intoxicating liquors and saloon fixtures, and entirely of intoxicating liquors and saloon fixtures, described in the said complaint herein, and to draw all contracts for the transfer of said property and agreements to transfer the same, make all invoices, examine all instruments and perform all other services as an attorney at law in connection with the said sale and transfer.” This is the contract upon which issue was joined, for the plaintiff in his reply denies making it or any contract with defendant for the sale of said property, or for any other purpose whatever.
The defendant further alleges in said answer that he effected a sale of said personal property to said Dan Barnidge for the purchase price of $3,500; that $1,700 thereof was paid in cash and said note and mortgage for $1,800 were turned over to the plaintiff as the remaining part of said purchase price; and that by reason of his services in effecting said sale the plaintiff became indebted to him in the sum of $200, and asked that it be adjudged and decreed by the court that he have a lien upon said note and mortgage and the possession of them until the amount of $200, as above stated, for said services, be paid to him. All of the material allegations of this answer were denied by plaintiff.
Upon the issues thus joined, the cause was tried before the court with a jury, and the jury returned the following verdict:
*326 “We, the jury in the above-entitled action, find that the defendant is entitled to a lien upon the note and mortgage described in the complaint for the sum of $175, and is entitled to the possession of the same until said sum is paid him by the plaintiff, and so we find for the defendant. ’ ’
The court, in accordance with this verdict, entered judgment against the plaintiff, and ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant, W. A. Bergstresser, do have and has a lien upon the note and mortgage described in the complaint in this action for the sum of $175, and that he is entitled to the possession of the same until said sum is paid him by the plaintiff with interest thereon at the rate of seven' per cent per annum from the date of said judgment until paid and for costs and disbursements of the action. From this judgment the plaintiff appeals.
A number of errors have been assigned by the appellant, which, under our view of the case, it will not be necessary to pass upon, for the main and vital question presented by this appeal is as to whether or not the defendant had a lien on the note and mortgage for the services he had rendered plaintiff, and a decision of this question will dispose of the case. But in order to decide this question, it will be necessary to consider the first and second assignments of error as set forth in appellant’s brief, for these two assignments of error are so connected that they must be considered together.
The case is somewhat peculiar as presented to this court, in the fact that the testimony at the trial in the court below did not keep well within the issues raised by the pleadings. The contract alleged in the defendant’s affirmative defense or cross-complaint is materially different from the one he testified to as having been made with the plaintiff in regard to the sale of said personal property. The contract set out in his answer is that defendant agreed with plaintiff to negotiate the sale of and sell the property described in the complaint, and also to draw the contracts for the transfer of said property and agreements to transfer the same, make all invoices, examine all instruments, and perform all other services as an attorney at law in connection with the sale and transfer of
Coming now to the consideration of the assignments of error by the appellant heretofore mentioned, they are as follows:
“1. Insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict.
“2. That the verdict is against the law in this: That the evidence shows that the defendant did not at any time ever have the possession of the property for sale described in the complaint of the plaintiff, and that the evidence of the defendant shows that the property for sale was never at any time delivered to him for sale, nor that the defendant ever at any time had possession of the title papers to the property for sale, and does not show that the defendant was in law entitled to a common-law lien upon the papers in question in this ease.”
All the facts necessary to entitle the plaintiff to recover in said action are alleged in the complaint; that is, that he was
The evidence of how the note and mortgage got into the possession of Bergstresser is somewhat vague, but we think it shows that Smith himself did not give him possession of them to be held as a part of the purchase price of said property, nor as a direct transaction in connection with the sale thereof. At page 59 of the transcript, the plaintiff testifies as follows: “Did you ever deliver to Bergstresser the property described in the complaint ? A. No, sir. Q. Did you ever at any time authorize or consent that Bergstresser should hold this note and mortgage for you? A. No, sir.” Dan Barnidge, who purchased the property of Smith, in his testimony at page 83 of the transcript, says that he turned the note and mortgage over to Smith, and Smith handed it to Bergstresser, “he told me he had to have an abstract and he wanted Bergstresser to pass on it.” Bergstresser himself, at page 104 of the transcript, testifies as follows: “Before leaving the office, Smith said, ‘ There is the note and mortgage. I want you to keep it, and you look over the abstract and see that it is all right, because this is no sale unless that is all right. ’ ’ ’
From all the testimony and from- the circumstances in connection with the alleged agency and the sale of said property, we do not think the plaintiff ever delivered to defendant this note and mortgage as part of the purchase price, and that if plaintiff did put them into defendant’s hands, he put them
The important instruction of the court below bearing upon this question is as follows:
“If the owner of personal property employs another person to procure a purchaser for said property for a commission, and the latter procures a purchaser who purchases said property from the owner upon terms accepted by the owner, then the latter has a right to the agreed commission. If, under such circumstances, the purchase price, or any part thereof, is delivered to the person procuring said purchaser by the owner, such person has a lien upon said purchase price or any part thereof so delivered to him for his commission, dependent on possession, that is, he has a right to hold the same until his commission is paid.”
We do not pass upon the question of the correctness of this instruction as a principle of law under other and different facts than appear in this ease, but we hold that' the testimony here does not bring this -question within the purview of such principle. The defendant was not a factor, nor broker in regard to said property, but, giving his testimony the most favorable construction as to the terms of his employment in the premises, he was not in possession of the property, he had no authority to close a sale thereof, no authority to deliver possession of the same to the purchaser or to receive the purchase price therefor. And if, as defendant asserts, the plaintiff, in connection with closing said sale, did put these papers into his hands incidentally, and only to have him examine the mortgage, pass upon its value, and in connection with the abstract, see if the description of the land in the mortgage was correct, and also if it was free of other encumbrances, defendant could not hold them as against the demand of the plaintiff, nor was he entitled to a lien upon them for any commission which might be due from the plaintiff to him in negotiating the sale of said property.
The facts in this ease clearly show that the defendant did not have a statutory lien upon said note and mortgage under
The respondent.in his brief, however, admits that under the facts in this case he could not maintain a statutory lien, but contends that he has a common-law lien upon said papers. A number of authorities in support of this position are cited, and we have briefly examined some of them, but do not think those examined sustain his contention.
Gresham v. Galveston County (Tex. Civ. App.), 36 S. W. 796, is a case where the county entered into a specific contract with Gresham and entered an order or decree of the commissioners’ court of Galveston county, Texas, appointing him as agent of that county to sell or lease four certain leagues of land granted said county for public school purposes, describing the same; that the said Walter Gresham, in pursuance and by virtue of the power and authority of said order and decree, had sold various tracts of land out of the four-league grant, and as compensation therefor he was to receive ten per cent commission on all lands sold, and he had power and authority to sell or to lease said lands, or any part thereof, upon such terms and for such prices as to him might seem best for the interests of said county. There were some of the notes taken for sales of these lands that were not collected at the time the controversy about them arose which was terminated by the judgment in said action, and Gresham claimed that he was entitled to hold these notes until certain sums which he claimed as commissions on sales made, for which said notes were taken by him, were paid to him by the county. In that case the court held that he would be entitled to retain the notes while acting in good faith within the scope of his agency for the purpose of collecting them, and in that way securing his commission for their collection. We do not think this ease sustains the contention of the respondent.
Vinton v. Baldwin, 95 Ind. 433, was a case where there was a contract made between the parties whereby the appellant, Vinton, was appointed agent for the appellee, Baldwin, to procure a loan, and for his services for procuring such loan promised to pay him for said services five per cent commission
In Shaw v. Ferguson, 78 Ind. 547, it was held that, “One who carries on the business of slaughtering hogs and curing, storing and selling the product, as well for himself as for others, and makes advances to such customers, continuously holding possession of their product until he sells it, is a factor, and has a lien on the product of the customer, for services and advances.” It will be seen that this authority does not apply to the case at bar, for the reason that the defendants in that case were conducting a slaughtering and pork-packing establishment in the city of Indianapolis Ind., and, as it is held in the case, were factors in the possession of the property delivered to them, and all the proceeds of the products of said slaughtering and packing-house was received by them from their customers.
The authorities cited by appellant seem to uniformly hold that a common-law lien is a right to retain the property of another on account of labor performed or money expended upon that specific property. The law as to common-law liens is well and we think fully expressed in American & Eng. Ency. of Law, vol. 19, 2d ed., pp. 8 and 9, as follows:
“It is a principle of the common law that every man who has lawful possession of a chattel upon which he has expended his money, labor, or skill, at the request of its owner, thereby enhancing its value, may detain it as security for his debt. This right extends to all such manufacturers, tradesmen, and laborers, as receive chattels for the purpose of repairing or otherwise improving their condition, and also to common carriers, innkeepers, warehousemen, and wharfingers.”
There are a number of other authorities referred to by appellant in his brief, but we deem it unnecessary to comment