On April 13, last year, plaintiff sued defendant upon 12 promissory notes. The answer admitted the execution of the notes; and, as a counterclaim, alleged that ever since August 1, 1911, plaintiff had wrongfully deprived defendant of her automobile to her damage in the sum of $6,000, and judgment was prayed against plaintiff for’ $4,500, the difference, substantially, between the amount due on the notes and the damages claimed. The reply alleged a conditional sale of the automobile by plaintiff to defendant pursuant to which the notes in suit were given; that under the terms of the sale the title of the car was to remain in plaintiff until payment in full was made; that in the event of failure to pay the notes plaintiff was entitled to the possession of the automobile, and that defendant had defaulted in her payments. A claim to the right of possession was also set up because of repairs made upon the car.
It is undisputed that on Hay 2, 1910, a written contract was entered into between the parties under which defendant agreed to buy the automobile from plaintiff for $2,450, to pay $400 thereof then,
The court, after correctly stating that failure on part of defendant to prove a tender of payment of the repair bill, when the car was demanded in July, 1911, would preclude any recovery whatever on the counterclaim, instructed the jury that, defendant having defaulted in her contract, plaintiff’s possession of the automobile, was not wrongful until this action was begun, “but by the commencement of this action upon the notes here in question, the plaintiff elected to transform the contract under which this sale was made, which is a form of conditional contract, into an absolute contract of sale. That is, at the time when the plaintiff elected to sue upon the note, by making such election, the title to this car vested in the defendant,” and the reasonable value of the use of the ear from the commencement of the action until the-trial should be allowed as a counterclaim to the notes. The jury allowed, in round numbers $425 on the counterclaim. The defendant appeals from the order denying a new trial.
Appellant’s main contention is that plaintiff by suing to enforce the payment of the full purchase price has barred itself from claiming immunity from damages for depriving defendant of the possession and use of the car during any of the time subsequent to the making' of the original contract. Under our decisions the seller, in a con
Apart from the foregoing considerations which lead to the conclusion that, upon the pleadings and undisputed facts, the learned trial court correctly fixed the time at which plaintiff’s possession of the automobile became wrongful and actionable, the testimony clearly shows that neither party considered plaintiff’s possession of the car
Minor points raised by appellant cannot affect the result. It is said the notes should have been excluded as being without consideration. These, set out in liaec verba in the complaint, stated that they were for value received. Their execution was admitted in the answer and neither payment nor failure or want of consideration was alleged. We fail to see prejudice in their reception.
As the issues were made by the pleadings it may be that the negotiations and attitude of the parties in reference to the automobile from July, 1911, until the commencement of the suit were of no importance, but it went to show the situation in respect to defendant’s asserted demands for possession of the car, and under the theory upon -which the case was submitted to the jury and in view of the verdict no possible harm to defendant could have resulted.
There was no abuse of discretion in refusing defendant’s request to amend the answer so as to increase the alleged value of the use of the automobile from $10 per day to $20 per day. But even if there had been, defendant cannot complain, for it is plain from the verdict that for the 52 days during which plaintiff held possession wrongfully the jury found the value of the use per day to be less than $9.
Order affirmed.