67 N.Y.S. 444 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1900
Instead of the sufficient and scientific allegation that the defendants unlawfully took or detained from the plaintiff and converted to their own use the chattels described, to his damage, &c., leaving all evidence for the proper time and place, i. e., the trial, the complaint abounds in useless verbiage. It alleges that the defendant Warland is an attorney at law, and as such “ was the attorney and legal adviser of the defendant ” corporation “ as to all the facts and matters hereinafter mentioned ”. It afterwards alleges that “ as such attorney at law ” he “ requested, directed, advised and caused ” the other two defendants “ to unlawfully
It is difficult to imagine what could have induced the learned pleader to go into this description of the defendant Warland, and allege that he acted “ as such attorney ”. He must have been trying to see how near he could come to making the complaint demurrable. The defendant Warland now contends that the complaint by these allegations shows that he is not liable; for where an attorney at law “ acts only - in the execution of the duties of his calling or profession, and does not go beyond it, and does not actually participate in the trespass, he is not liable, though what he does may aid another party in its commission ” (Ford v. Williams, 13 N. Y. 577).
But the allegation that he “ caused ” the other two defendants “to unlawfully and wrongfully take and carry away the said goods ”, seems to be an allegation that he was a party to such taking and carrying away, and suffices provided it amounts to an allegation of conversion. I do not think it does. “ As the conversion is the gist of the action, it must necessarily be stated in the declaration. It is simply averred that the defendant converted the goods to his own use” (1 Chitty PL 181). This has always been and still is so. I find no instance to the contrary. If the complaint does not in some form of words allege that the defendant converted the goods to his own use it does not allege a conversion. This complaint has no such allegation against the defendant Warland. It may allege a trespass; but it does not allege a conversion against him. Chattels may be wrongfully taken and carried away, and still not be converted. That they were so taken and carried away is evidence going to make out a conversion. But we are not dealing with a question of evidence, but with a question of pleading. They may have been restored on demand or otherwise, or they may have been converted. The latter cannot he presumed, nor can the former, either. No presumption is allowed on the subject. The conversion cannot be found unless pleaded. The allegation following in a separate numbered paragraph is only that the other two defendants “ converted ” the goods to their own use.
It seems, however, that with us a demand and refusal is now said to be a necessary allegation in an action of replevin where the allegation is not of a wrongful taking but of a wrongful detention. IIow this can be so I confess I cannot see. Such demand is said to be made necessary by section 1721 of the Oode of Civil Procedure in respect of the complaint in such an action, viz.: “ Where the complaint contains a sufficient statement of the plaintiff’s title, a general allegation, that the defendant wrongfully took the chattel, is sufficient, without setting forth the facts, showing that the taking was wrongful. Where the taking of the chattel is not complained of, but the action is founded upon its wrongful detention, the complaint must set forth the facts, showing that the detention was wrongful”. In Scofield v. Whitelegge (49 N. Y. 259), after fully discussing the question, and showing that the last sentence in this section requires in such a complaint allegations showing the plaintiff’s title to or special property in the chattels, so that it may appear that it is unlawful to detain them from him, Judge Folger further says without any discussion or apparent consideration of the matter, “ That the same considerations are applicable to the lack of the averment of a demand and refusal; if the plaintiff’s case is to depend upon a wrongful detention, without a wrongful taking in the first instance”. It is not easy to see that this Code provision intended to make any such change in pleading; and a learned bar has not been satisfied with this observation of Judge Folger; but it seems sometimes to be taken not as a dictum but for the decision of the court (Seifert v. Kraft, 13 Civ. Pro. 321). This latter case cites Goodwin v. Wertheimer (99 N. Y. 149) as authority for the
The demurrer is sustained.