The plaintiff, a building contractor, brings this action of trover for the alleged conversion of certain building materials. The matter is reported here on an agreed statement of facts. Plaintiff by written contract undertook to erect a building for Bourque-Lanigan Post No. 5, The American Legion, which, for convenience, we may refer to as the “Post.” Subsequently plaintiff brought a bill in equity to enforce his lien for labor and materials furnished by him to the Post. In this action he was successful. The parties agree that, “The identical materials included in said lien claim are now the subject of the present suit.” When plaintiff ceased operations, work remained to be done and defendants were employed by the Post to complete the building.
The plaintiff in trover must show invasion of his possessory interest. “So the possession of personal property carries with it the presumption of title and enables the possessor to maintain trover against any person except the rightful owner.”
Stevens
v.
Gordon,
Moreover, upon these facts, the plaintiff by his assertion of lien must be deemed to have elected his remedy and to have adopted the theory that the property had passed to the Post. This theory would ground the claim of lien or assumpsit but not the tort. The doctrine of election of remedies has been applied in somewhat similar situations.
Ware
v.
Percival,
The agreed statement of facts contains the following: “When (plaintiff) and the (Post) severed relations, there was a considerable amount of building material not yet affixed to the building, left on the premises, which said defendants at the request and order of the (Post), proceeded to use for the completion of the building.” This nebulous statement does nothing to assist us in deciding this cause. It does not inform us whether any part or all of these items are involved in this trover action — or even what the items consist of. The parties have chosen to rely on an agreed statement of facts in lieu of evidence and must state the facts with such certainty that legal principles may be applied. However, even if we were supposed to infer from this statement that the items alleged to have been converted were not affixed by plaintiff to the real estate, we would not be disposed to reach a different result. The unequivocal statement that they were included by plaintiff in his claim of lien and the admission that they were left on the real estate of the Post and were treated by the Post as by one having possession, title, and the right to control and disposition are consistent only with the theory adopted by the plaintiff himself that both title and possession had passed to the Post before any acts of alleged conversion by these defendants ever occurred. If that be so, the only question remaining unresolved was one of payment by the Post to the plaintiff and this action of trover against third party defendants claiming under the Post would not lie. The complete record of the lien action is before us and there is no suggestion that plaintiff’s recovery was in any way reduced because of the non-lienability of any items or of these items *409 now in suit in particular. But even if there had been such reduction, upon the theory of passage of title and right to possession adopted by plaintiff, his vehicle of attempted recovery should have been assumpsit. The plaintiff cannot now classify as conversion the use made by defendants under the orders and directions of the Post of property which both the plaintiff and the Post have consistently dealt with as belonging to, and possessed by, the Post.
We have not looked beyond the record before us in reaching the foregoing conclusion which effectively decides this case, but we do not deem it improper to draw upon our own intimate familiarity with all of the circumstances solely for the purpose of suggesting that no injustice can or does result from this decision. The plaintiff here was in willful breach of his building contract with the Post. This court has now been called upon to issue its fourth opinion directly resulting from this controversy. The lien claim together with an action of damages brought by the Post against this plaintiff were reviewed by us in
Bourque-Lanigan Post No. 5, The American Legion
v.
Peter P. Carey,
Judgment for defendants, with costs.
