Court Opinion

ID: 3999035
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:56:25.959182+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:56:01.529316
License: Public Domain

The respondent, which will be hereafter called the "bank," on December 27, 1922, recovered a judgment against M.O. Page, and on the following day had general execution issued thereon and placed in the hands of the appellant Bear (who was the sheriff of Yakima county and hereafter will be called the "sheriff") to levy upon the property of M.O. Page situated in that county. On January 2, 1923, the sheriff forwarded the execution to his deputy who resided in the same community as did M.O. Page. The deputy was unable to locate the personal property belonging to Page, and returned the execution to the sheriff. Thereafter, one Luce, who had succeeded Bear as sheriff, made a levy on personal property belonging to Page, at which time it was discovered that M.O. Page by bill of sale, on January 8, 1923, had transferred his property to his father, Joseph S. Page. The latter brought an action restraining the levy and was successful therein and secured the return of the property to him. The bank, believing that it had lost its property by reason of the sheriff's negligence in failing to make the levy, brought this action against the sheriff and his bond, and recovered a judgment, from which this appeal has been prosecuted.
[1] But one of the assigned errors is extensively argued, and that one alone will be here discussed. It relates to the admission as evidence in this suit of the judgment in the action by Joseph S. Page against the sheriff, the appellants contending that this judgment, as indicating that the transfer from M.O. Page to Joseph S. Page was valid, was highly prejudicial to them in the determination of the issue in this case as to the character of that transfer. The question that *Page 41 
was before the jury for determination in this action was whether, through the negligence of the sheriff in levying execution, the bank had been damaged. And whether it had been damaged depended upon whether, at the time the sheriff's successor made the levy, M.O. Page had made an actual bona fide transfer of his property so that levy upon it was fruitless. In other words, the question was whether the transfer from the judgment debtor to his father was a good and valid one. The father recovered the property in the action begun by him against the sheriff's successor in office, but that judgment, of course, was not determinative of the question so far as the sheriff in this action was concerned, he not having been a party to the other proceeding.
If the judgment in the other action had been admitted for the purpose of proving that the transfer was good and valid, such testimony would have been highly prejudicial to the appellants and would have been improperly admitted. It was not admitted, however, for that purpose, and the fact that it may have been detrimental to the appellants' case presents no legal reason for its exclusion, if it was properly admitted on other grounds. The court limited its admission, and so instructed the jury, for the purpose of showing that the bank had been unable to obtain the property of M.O. Page, upon which levy of its execution could have been made, had the sheriff acted with that degree of promptness which the jury should find was proper.
It was necessary, not only for the bank to show that, at the time the execution was placed in the hands of the sheriff for levy, M.O. Page had property upon which the levy could have been made; but also to show the value of that property, that the sheriff did not act promptly, and that the bank had not secured that property in satisfaction of its judgment. To prove this *Page 42 
latter fact, it was competent to show that the bank, at one time, had had possession of the property by the levy made by the sheriff's successor, but that it had been taken away from it by legal means, to wit, by judgment secured by Joseph S. Page against the sheriff's successor. As already stated, the introduction of this judgment may have been damaging to the appellants before the jury, but, being admissible upon one phase of the case, the fact that it may have incidentally been damaging on some other phase was no ground for its exclusion. The rule is well recognized, that a judgment in one suit is admissible in another one, although against a different person, where the judgment is produced to prove that a certain state of facts exists, when the existence of that state of facts is admissible as to the issue on trial or relevant to such issue. Jones on Evidence (3d ed.), § 590. And the rule is well established that, even though evidence properly admissible for one purpose may be inadmissible for another, still, it cannot, for that reason, be excluded.
"`That evidence properly admissible for one purpose may be so perverted in its use as to effect a different and illegitimate purpose, is not altogether preventable. But such evidence cannot on that account be wholly rejected. The correction of its abuse lies in such explanation as the presiding judge may feel required to give to the jury concerning it. State v. Farmer, 84 Me. 436,24 A. 985.'" 1 Wigmore on Evidence (2d ed.), § 13.
In this case, the court did everything that was within its power to prevent the abuse of this judgment, by explaining to the jury the purpose, and the only purpose, for which they could use it.
Judgment affirmed.
TOLMAN, C.J., PARKER, MITCHELL, and ASKREN, JJ., concur. *Page 43