109 Ind. 371 | Ind. | 1886
In this case the appellee sued the appellant in a complaint of two paragraphs, but the first paragraph was subsequently withdrawn by appellee, leaving the second paragraph as his only complaint in the record. In this complaint appellee alleged that he was the owner of a certain piano, numbered 26,799, made by the Emerson Piano Company of Boston, Massachusetts; that such piano was of the value of $150; that the appellant unlawfully and wrongfully retained possession of such piano, and had unlawfully and wrongfully converted the same to his own use, to appellee’s damage in the sum of $250, for which sum he demanded judgment, and for all other proper relief.
To this complaint appellant answered in two paragraphs, whereof he subsequently withdrew the first paragraph. In the second paragraph -of his answer, appellant stated special and affirmative facts by way of defence; and to this paragraph appellee’s demurrer, for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein to constitute a defence, was sustained by the court. Appellant failed to answer further, and, by his consent, the cause was tried by the court without a jury, and the court found for the appellee and assessed his damages in the sum of $108.12, and rendered judgment accordingly, to which judgment appellant at the time excepted.
In this court appellant has assigned errors which call in question (1) the overruling of his demurrer to the second paragraph of complaint, (2) the sustaining of appellee’s demurrer to the second paragraph of appellant’s answer, (3) the overruling of his motion for an order requiring appellee to answer certain interrogatories more specifically, and (4) the rendition of judgment herein for appellee on the pleadings.
1. Appellant demurred to the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint, upon two grounds of objection, namely: 1st. It did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action ; and, 2d. Because it stated a claim for damages for the wrongful conversion of the piano, and was improperly joined with a paragraph which sought to recover the possession of such piano. Of course, this demurrer was filed before the withdrawal by appellee of the first paragraph of his complaint.
It is impossible for us to know what cause of action was stated in the first paragraph of appellee’s complaint. It is not in the record, and while it may have stated, as appellant’s counsel claims it did, a cause of action in replevin, yet, so far as we are informed by the record, which to us,imports “absolute verity,” it may as well have stated a cause of action on a promissory note, as one in replevin.
In discussing the ruling of the court below on the second paragraph of complaint, appellant’s counsel says: “We claim that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, for the reason that, while it alleges ownership in appellee, it does not allege that he was entitled to the possession.” It was not necessary that the second paragraph of the complaint should allege that appellee was entitled to the possession of the piano. In this paragraph appellee did not seek to recover possession of the piano, but simply sued to recover damages for the unlawful and wrongful conversion of the piano by appellant to his own use. For that purpose the paragraph stated facts amply sufficient to withstand appellant’s demurrer thereto ; and, so far as the first ground of objection is concerned, there was certainly no error in overruling such demurrer. Reish v. Reynolds, 68 Ind. 561; Stockmell v. Thomas, 76 Ind. 506.
But appellant’s counsel insists, that the demurrer ought to have been sustained because of the improper joinder of causes of action. If counsel were right in this position, the error
2. In the second paragraph of his answer, which was addressed to each-and both of the paragraj)hs of complaint "before the withdrawal of the first paragraph thereof, the appellant said that, while he denied any wrongful taking or wrongful possession by him, and any unlawful and wrongful ■conversion by him, of the piano described in the complaint; he.admitted that suoh piano came into his possession under the following circumstances, to wit: That the appellee delivered such piano into the possession of one Wm. G. Chenowith, on the 17th day of July, 1882, at Lafayette, Indiana, without causing to be executed or recorded any bill of sale or chattel mortgage thereof, but that said Chenowith, on the day last named, executed to appellee two certain promissory notes, ■each of which had attached thereto a contract which could be separated from the note without impairing it in any way,' copies of which notes and attached contracts were filed with •such answer and referred to as parts of such answer; that such notes and attached contracts were accepted by appellee as evidence of Chenowith’s indebtedness for said piano, and the transaction was treated by appellee as a conditional sale
And appellant further alleged, that the contract following ■each of such notes declared that the “ above note ” was given .as evidence of a part of the price to be paid for such piano, and that Stewart had agreed to sell and had delivered the same, but that it was to remain the property of appellee until all the notes were paid, and that “ this statement may be detached from the above note, without being deemed an alteration or mutilation thereof;” that Chenowith, on January 9th, 1884, paid appellee $25, on March 26th, 1884, $25, and on June 25th, 1884, $20, which sums he accepted and credited .upon the first of such notes; that soon after appellee delivered possession of said piano to Chenowith under such notes and attached contracts, Chenowith, with appellee’s knowledge and consent, removed such piano from Lafayette to Fort Wayne, Indiana, in which latter place he continued to reside with appellee’s knowledge until the early part of 1885; that, on November 30th, 1884, Chenowith publicly offered said piano for sale for a considerable period of time, when appellee’s notes were long past due, without any effort on his part to repossess himself of such piano; that appellant was then and since engaged in the business of buying
We have given appellant the benefit of a fuller statement of the second paragraph of his answer, than Ave othenvise would have done, for the reason that we have found it difficult to determine upon what precise theory the pleading Avas constructed. It would seem from the entire paragraph of answer, that it was prepared by the pleader for a two-fold purpose, namely : 1. To shoAV as nearly as it could be done, by the note and agreement executed by Chenowith to the appellee, and the delivery of the possession of the piano by appellee to Chenowith, the sale of the piano was not conditional,.
As to the first of these purposes, it will suffice to say, we think, that Chenowith’s note and agreement to and with the appellee, which were executed contemporaneously and must be construed together as parts of one and the same transaction, aud which were a part of appellant’s answer herein, show very clearly that appellee did not sell, but only agreed to thereafter sell, the piano described in the complaint toChenowith, and that such instrument was to remain the property of appellee until it was fully paid for; and that,, until that time, Chenowith should have no property in, and no right to sell, mortgage, pledge, or make any other disposition whatever of, the aforesaid instrument.
The legality and validity of such a conditional sale of personal property have often been recognized in the decisions of this court. In Lanman v. McGregor, 94 Ind. 301, a case similar in some of its features to the case in hand, this court said : “ Where, in such a case, the vendee of the personal property, without the knowledge or consent of the vendor, sells the property to third parties, who convert the same to their own use, they acquire no title to the property as against the original vendor, and are liable to him for its value or, as in this case, for the balance due him from his vendee on the agreed price thereof.” Upon the same subject, see, also, the following cases: Bradshaw v. Warner, 54 Ind. 58; Evansville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Erwin, 84 Ind. 457; Payne v. June, 92 Ind. 252.
In so far as the answer attempted to show that appellee was estopped, by his conduct or laches, from asserting his claim for damages for the wrongful conversion of his piano, it
The court did not err, we think, in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the second paragrapoh of appellant’s answer.
3. It is claimed that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for an order requiring appiellee to answer two interrogatories more specifically. There is no available error, we think, in this ruling of the court. To the first of these interrogatories, the answer was indefinite as to time, but so was the interrogatory. To the last of the two interrogatories the answer was : “ I can not remember.” This answer was as specific as it could be made, if it was true; and appellant’s motion did not question its truth.
We have found no error in the record of. this cause which authorizes or requires the reversal of the judgment.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.