Court Opinion

ID: 6669096
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:08:10.924929+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:26.590647
License: Public Domain

By the Court,
Hawley, C. J.:
This action was brought by the plaintiff, Hanson, to recover a certain lot of machinery for a quartz mill, consisting of an engine, boiler, etc., alleged to be the property of A. L. Page, deceased.
The cause was tried before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants moved for a new trial, which was refused. This appeal is from the judgment and from the order refusing a new trial.
1. The question whether the evidence sustains the findings cannot be considered because the findings of the court are not embodied in the statement on motion for a new trial. (Alderson v. Gilmore, ante, 84, and cases there cited.)
2. The documentary evidence contained in the transcript cannot be considered because not embodied in the statement or identified as required by the statute. (1 Compiled Laws, 1258; Dean v. Pritchard, 9 Nev. 232.)
*3973. There was, in our opinion, sufficient evidence on the part of plaintiff (although it was very slight) to sustain the action of the court in refusing to grant a nonsuit. It was not absolutely essential that the testimony upon the part of plaintiff should establish the title of Page by direct test! mony that it was his property on the day of his death. If shown to be his property prior to that time the law would presume, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, that it continued to be his up to the time of his death, and that it belonged to the estate at the date of the commencement of this action. The declaration of Page, while in the possession of the property, that it belonged to him, taken in connection with the fact that it was marked in his name, furnished some evidence, at least, in proof of his title.
4. The principle of law that when one of two innocent parties must suffer loss by the fraudulent act of a third, he who enables such third party to occasion the loss must bear it, as decided in Poorman v. Mills, 39 Cal. 345, and other cases, has no application to the facts of this case. There is no testimony in the record that either Page, in his lifetime, or his administrator, after his decease, consented to the taking of the property in question by the Alida S. M. Oo.
5. If the property belonged to Page the taking possession of it, without his knowledge or consent, by the Alida S. M. Co., or the levying upon it and selling it under an execution against the Alida S. M. Co., by the grantor of the defendants, was unlawful and no demand was necessary to enable the plaintiff to maintain this action.
6. The testimony does not conclusively establish the fact, as claimed by appellants, that Page during his life-time sold the property to the Alida S. M. Co. It only shows that Murray, the superintendent of said company, ‘ ‘ claimed that the deed from Page to the Alida S. M. Co. was intended to convey all of the property that he had in Alida, and that it did convey all such property;” that Higgs “always claimed that the machinery for the new mill was included in the mortgage ” to him and Travis; that he at one time had the possession of the property and offered to sell it, and that Murray instituted certain proceedings, by man-*398damns, against Higgs, and thereby obtained possession of the property in controversy.
The statement sets forth the fact that the “peremptory mandamus,” the deed from “Page to the Alida S. M. Co.,” and the mortgage from “Page to Higgs and Travis,” was offered as rebutting evidence on the part of the plaintiff (although not in the statement or identified in the transcript so as to authorize us either to examine or consider the same), leaving the inference at least that these documents did not sustain the assertions and claims of the respective witnesses.
The mere possession of the personal property by the Alida S. M. Co. was only prima facie evidence of title, and did not protect the purchaser, buying on the faith of such possession, against the true owner of the property.
7. As none of the documentary evidence can be considered, the offered testimony of the witness Nicholas becomes immaterial, and it is therefore unnecessary to decide whether the court erred in refusing to admit it.
8. There is no testimony in the record that the defendants or their grantor were ever misled as to the ownership of the property, by any act of Page or of the plaintiff, so as to create an estoppel. If the defendants relied upon such a defense they ought to have alleged the facts constituting the estoppel in their answer.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.