
    The Hampton & Branchville Railroad & Lumber Co., Appellant, v. Robert R. Sizer et al., Respondents.
    (City Court of New York, General Term,
    May, 1900.)
    Attachment — Consignee’s commissions on a sale gives him no attachable interest in the thing for sale, as against the owner.
    The fact that consignees of lumber were to receive commissions if they sold it does not give them an attachable interest therein, and the true owners of it are entitled to recover it, in replevin, from the attaching creditors of the consignees.
    Appeal from a judgment dismissing the complaint at a Trial Term.
    Willis B. Dowd, for appellant.
    Conway & Westbrook, for-respondent Sizer. - .
    Henry C. Willeox, for The American Surety Co. ’
   Conlan, J.

The action is to recover certain chattels, to-wit, about '79,000 feet of lumber, also for damages for detention. It is alleged that the plaintiff was and still is the sole owner and entitled to the sole possession of said lumber and to each and every part thereof, and that the defendant Sizer wrongfully and unlawfully caused the same to be seized under an attachment against the firm of Campbell & Scherer and sold by the sheriff in satisfaction of a judgment obtained against that firm by the defendant Sizer. The American Surety Company was substituted as a defendant in the place of the sheriff, having indemnified the latter. There is no dispute — certainly no proof — but that the plaintiff was the original owner of the lumber in question; it was cut, dressed and shipped by the plaintiff to New York; Scherer was acting as agent of the plaintiff in the transaction, as clearly appears from the evidence in the case, nor is there anywhere in the record any evidence that Campbell & Scherer, the judgment debtors, ever acquired any title to this precise property, and it does not appear upon what pretense of title, in them, the same was ever taken by the sheriff under the attachment. It is claimed by the defendants that because Scherer was entitled to a commission in the transaction, there was a leviable interest as against him in the property. This, we think, is untenable, and it does appear that Scherer had been paid his commission by the plaintiff. With no better evidence of title in the judgment debtors than is disclosed by the record, we are of the opinion that there was no such a right of property or possession in these parties as to render the same subject to a levy by the defendant Sizer; and the taking of the property of a third person in satisfaction of a debt, whether in' judgment or otherwise, was an unauthorized interference with the property and rights of such third person. There was not, in our opinion, any reason for withholding from the jury the consideration of the case upon all the evidence adduced, and the refusal of the trial court to permit the plaintiff to go to the jury on the question of the title to the property and of its rights to recover possession thereof was error, which calls for a reversal of the judgment.

Fitzsimons, Ch. J., and O’Dwyeb, J., concur.

.Judgment reversed and new trial ordered; with costs to appellant to abide event.  