81 Ind. App. 181 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1924
Action by appellant for damages for conversion. The only error assigned is the action of the court in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the complaint. It is averred therein that on and prior to February 24, 1921, the Vulcanite Company was the owner of fifty squares of shingles which it shipped on said date to appellee, such shipment being intended to fill an order from appellee, but by mistake of said roofing company, the shingles so shipped were not the kind ordered. Thereupon appellee wrote to said roofing com
In Hunter v. Cronkhite (1894), 9 Ind. App. 470, this court quotes with approval the following definition from 4 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law p. 108: “Conversion consists, as a tort, either in the appropriation of the personal property of another to the party’s own use and benefit, or in its destruction, or in exercising dominion over it, in exclusion and defiance of the rights of the owner or lawful possessor, or in withholding it from his possession, under a claim and title inconsistent with the owner’s.” There is no averment in appellant’s complaint that would constitute a conversion of the property involved on the part of appellee, in the light of the foregoing definitions. The agreement between the roofing company and appellee constituted appellee as the agent of the company, and, in that capacity, he was serving at the time he made the sale. At no time did he claim a right to or ownership of the property as against the roofing company, but after stating that the property had been sold, informed the company that as soon as payment was made, the remittance thereof would be made to the company. These acts were wholly within the scope of appellee’s authority as agent of the roofing company. Even if appellant’s letter were construed as an unequivocal demand for the possession of the property, it also required that appellee should ship the same back to the company. There was no obligation on the part of appellee, even if
Judgment affirmed.