157 N.W. 974 | N.D. | 1916
The complaint is for a joint conversion by a sheriff and another defendant. The sheriffs bondsmen on his official bond are also joined as defendants. To the complaint a demurrer was interposed and overruled. The issues of law thus presented are first for consideration.
After describing the property and stating its value on September 19, 1910, and averring its ownership as in one Olson, the complaint alleges, viz.:
“II.
“That prior to said 19th day of September, a. d. 1910, the defendant-Frank C. Davies had been duly elected sheriff in and for the county of Eddy and state of North Dakota, and on the 4th day of January, a. d. 1909, filed his official bond duly approved by the board of county commissioners of said county, with the county auditor of said county, with the defendants IB. Peoples, Peter Prader, and James G. Daily, as his sureties thereon. A duly certified copy of which bond is hereto annexed and made’a'part of this complaint and marked exhibit ‘A.’’ That the said Frank O. Davies then duly qualified as and heeame sheriff in and for said county, and at the' time hereinafter mentioned was acting sheriff in and for said county. ... -
“That on or about the 19th day of September, a. d. 1910, the defendant F. R. Cruden and the defendant Frank C. Davies by virtue and under color of his office aforesaid, without the consent of the said Oscar Olson and without leave, license, or authority from him, forcibly and unlawfully seized upon said personal property all and singular, and took the same from the possession of the said Oscar Olson, and have unlawfully converted and appropriated said personal property all and singular in their own use and in derogation of the rights of said Oscar Olson and to his damage in the sum of seven hundred dollars ($700).
“IV.
“That by reason of said unlawful seizure and conversion of the said above-described personal property by the said defendants F. R. Cruden and Frank C. Davies, the said Oscar Olson has been put to trouble, inconvenience, costs, and expense and has been damaged thereby in the sum of five hundred dollars ($500).
“V.
“That prior to the commencement of this action the said Oscar Olson duly sold, assigned, and transferred to this plaintiff, Steven Allen, all his rights, title, claim, and interest in and to the said property, or his right to damages therefor and the value thereof, by reason of the unlawful taking, detention, and conversion thereof by the said defendants F. R. Cruden and Frank O. Davies, and which said assignment was for a valuable consideration, and that plaintiff is now the owner and holder of said claim.
“VI.
“That plaintiff has demanded and caused to be demanded from said defendants F. R. Cruden and Frank C. Davies, the return to him of said property seized and taken by said defendants as aforesaid, but that the said demand has been by the said defendants refused, and the
The exhibit A referred to “as hereto annexed and made a part of this ■complaint” is the official bond, in statutory form and amount, of the sheriff, with defendants Peoples, Prader, and Daily as sureties thereon. Attached thereto is the oath of office taken by Davies, as sheriff, together with indorsements showing the filing of said official bond and oath with the county auditor. The grounds of demurrer taken are (1) improper joinder of causes of action, and (2) insufficiency of facts .stated to constitute a cause of action.
Beyond controversy the complaint states a cause of action in conversion against the sheriff, Davies. Lee v. Charmley, 20 N. D. 570, 33 L.R.A. (N.S.) 275, 129 N. W. 448; Welter v. Jacobson, 7 N. D. 32, 66 Am. St. Rep. 632, 73 N. W. 65. And stating a cause of action against •that official, one is charged against the bondsman if a breach of the official bond is disclosed, and said sureties may be joined with the principal in the same action. Lee v. Charmley, 20 N. D. 570, 30 L.R.A. (N. S.) 275, 129 N. W. 448; Stark County v. Mischel, 33 N. D. 432, 156 N. W. 931. As to the sheriff a cause of action in conversion is alleged. And where the same wrongful acts constituting the conversion are joined in and committed jointly by the official and another or others, all may be joined in one action to recover the damages suffered by the joint act of all, as each is responsible for the act of his joint tort-feasor, and ■either or all of said joint participants may be sued in one action where the rights to be vindicated all spring from and have origin in said joint act as the one transaction. This is the settled law of this jurisdiction under Stark County v. Mischel, supra. The test, then, is not whether Cruden can be joined with the sheriff where the two acting ■conjointly wrongfully converted the property of another, but instead is whether the complaint sufficiently states such joint and wrongful conversion by the two acting conjointly. As to this, appellant argues that Davies is alleged to have converted as sheriff, while Cruden appropriated as an individual, and hence they could not jointly convert this property because they were acting in different capacities. The reasons for their wrongful acts, conceding that their acts were wrongful, are immaterial. The owner of the property converted suffers damages be
Appellant urges that “no facts are pleaded from which it can be inferred that the acts done by the sheriff constituted a breach of the obligation of the undertaking of the defendants,” the sureties. If a conversion is alleged against the sheriff, a cause of action is thereby stated against the bondsmen, as the statutory official bond by law obligates the-sureties to respond for damages occasioned by a wrongful conversion. Such is the very purpose and fundamental reason for requiring such official bond. A cause of action is stated against the sheriff and a breach of the bond thereby charged.
But the sufficiency of the charge of a cause of action against the bondsmen is also attacked under demurrer by the contention that ikeexhibit cannot be looked to as supplying a necessary averment of
Another specification of error challenges the sufficiency of the proof to sustain the judgment. The appeal is from the judgment. Appellants are not in position to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, for the following reasons: Appellants admit in their brief that they stood upon their demurrer, and, as a condition precedent to their right to withdraw answers previously filed that they might interpose demurrer, agreed with opposing counsel and the.court that, if allowed to demur, they would stand upon their demurrer, and not answer over. The answers were withdrawn and the demurrer interposed just before trial and under this condition. This stipulation was made and acted upon to obviate any delay. The demurrer was overruled and property so. The defendants were in default in answer. A jury was called to which was submitted the issue of damages resulting from the admittedly joint conversion. Defendants were in default on the trial of said issue of fact, and did not participate therein. On an appeal from the judgment they challenge the sufficiency of the proof made on grounds of an alleged variance between the complaint and the proof. The complaint described some of the horses as mares and some as horses and as of certain ages, and the proof did not in all particulars correspond therewith as to sex and ages of the animals. The variance was immaterial, and, so far as the proof is concerned, there was no variance in a legal sense, and evidence was sufficient to sustain a recovery for the property shown to have been converted. Defendants are not in position to raise any such question of variance as long as the evidence fairly supports the judgment rendered. To permit them to do