Court Opinion

ID: 6581695
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:38:49.01299+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:18.616204
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Taft, J.
The plaintiff had a demand against one Hayward, and received from him certain property to sell and apply the proceeds upon such demand. The plaintiff took possession of the property and held it until it was attached by the defendant, and this suit is brought to recover its value.
To enable the plaintiff to sustain this action, it is not necessary that the transaction, between him and Hayward, should have been a sale. He received the goods, under an agreement to sell them and apply the proceeds upon his claims against Hayward, and he had a right to hold them against Hayward and any one claiming under him. The property may have been subject to attachment upon Hayward’s debts, but only in the manner pointed out by the statute; viz., a payment of the claims for which the plaintiff held it as security. The defendant did not pursue this method, but ignored the rights of the plaintiff, and was clearly a wrongdoer in attaching the property.
We think there was a sufficient change of possession to protect the rights of the plaintiff. The property was in a shop rented by Hayward, who gave possession of it to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff notified the owner of the building of the transfer of the property to him, and obtained permission from him to occupy the shop, and did so occupy it to the exclusion of Hayward. We think this a full and complete change of possession, and sufficient to protect the plaintiff.
The defendant claims that the referee should have found the fact whether the sale to the plaintiff was, or was not, fraudulent in law. The referee has found and reported the facts in relation *346to the sale and change of possession of the property, and refers the question raised to the court. No exception was taken to the report in this respect, and we dispose of the case upon the report as submitted.
Upon the facts reported it clearly became a question of law and not of fact, and was very properly referred to the court. We think the sale was valid. Whether the referee allowed excessive damages or not is a question that cannot be revised in this court.
Judgment affirmed.