25 Minn. 210 | Minn. | 1878
Action on a promissory note. Defendants pleaded, as a counterclaim, that “the said plaintiff had and received of these, defendants four steers, each of the age of three years, and there and then of the j ust and full value of $120, which said sum the plaintiff was owing to these defendants at and before the commencement of this action.” This counterclaim is badly pleaded, for it does not show a sale of the steers, nor how they were had and received by plaintiff. No exception, however, was taken to it, and the
The question, upon which there is much diversity of-decision, whether when one wrongfully takes and appropriates the property of another, the owner may waive the tort and sue in assumpsit upon an implied promise to pay the value, is not raised by the evidence; for the cases which restrict this right of election to the narrowest' limits admit that if the wrongdoer has sold the property, the owner may sue, as upon contract, for the money received at the sale. In this case, there was evidence of a sale; and where there has been a sale, and there is no proof to the contrary, the jury may presume that it was for cash, and for the value of the property. Burnap v. Partridge, 3 Vt. 144.
If a suit as upon contract could have been sustained on the transaction, it is a proper matter of counterclaim in an action on contract.
Order affirmed.