Citizens' Bank of Sikeston v. Scott Co. Mill. Co.

243 S.W. 433 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1922

Action for conversion. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff and defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff is a bank doing business at Sikeston. Defendant is in the milling and warehouse business at Sikeston and other points. D.C. Collier, a farmer, was indebted to plaintiff on a demand note in the sum of $2275 and was indebted to defendant in the sum of $946.17. Plaintiff held a chattel mortgage on a crop of corn and some other property of Collier's to secure its debt while defendant had no security for its debt. When the corn was gathered, Collier stored it with defendant and received warehouse receipts therefor. He delivered these receipts to plaintiff with instructions to sell the corn at any time they thought the price the best and *609 apply the proceeds on his note. The corn was held for sometime and on January 25, 1921, plaintiff, desiring to realize on the corn, sent its agent to defendant with a view to secure a settlement and to collect the value of the corn. The warehouse receipts for the corn were left with the defendant and a day or so later, the defendant delivered to plaintiff two "settlement sheets" which showed the amount of the corn and its value and also the amount of Collier's indebtedness to defendant which was subtracted from the value of the corn and checks were then made out for the balance and delivered to plaintiff with these "settlement sheets." Plaintiff looked these statements over and returned the checks to defendant with the statement that it held a chattel mortgage on the corn and could not allow the credits claimed by defendant for the amount of Collier's debt to it. After consulting an attorney and being advised acceptance of these checks would not prejudice their rights to insist upon the remainder, the checks were accepted. The plaintiff then demanded pay for the remainder of the corn which defendant had retained to pay Collier's debt to it. The defendant at first refused to admit that plaintiff could take the corn under its mortgage at that time for the reason, as it contended, that as the mortgage covered other property, they must foreclose as to that before they could appropriate the corn held by defendant. Defendant's testimony shows that it abandoned that claim in two or three days and at that time defendant claims an agreement was made with plaintiff by which defendant was to assist Collier to raise enough money to pay off one-half of the amount due on plaintiff's note and on that being done, defendant would be released from liability to plaintiff and could retain the corn. That in pursuance to that agreement, the defendant did assist Collier to raise some money by spending some time trying to help him to raise it and by buying a corn sheller from Collier for $175 and some peas which Collier testified were sold at $1.40 per bushel, the market price, while defendant claims it paid $1.50, which *610 was more than the market price. Plaintiff's witnesses denied that such a contract was made.

Defendant asked a peremptory instruction to find for it on the ground that the evidence failed to show a conversion of the corn. This was refused. Defendant's contention on this point is based on two facts: First; that plaintiff's witnesses, who had transacted the business for it, testified that the corn was sold to defendant and if it was sold, then plaintiff could only sue for the purchase price and could not sue for conversion. Second: that demand for possession of the corn was not made by plaintiff before the suit was filed and for that reason a suit for conversion could not be maintained.

On the question of a sale, it is true that plaintiff's witnesses used language which standing alone would show a sale, yet when all the testimony is considered together, we do not think it can be construed to show a sale of that part of the corn which defendant insisted on retaining to pay the debt of Collier to it. It did buy and pay for the excess of the corn but did not buy or pay for the corn of the value of $946.17, which was the amount of Collier's debt to it. There could not be a sale by plaintiff to defendant without defendant agreeing to pay plaintiff for the corn and that it constantly insisted it should not do, and plaintiff's witnesses did not testify that defendant agreed to buy the corn and pay plaintiff therefor, but did testify that defendant refused to pay for the corn in controversy and this refusal was based on the claim that defendant had the right to keep the corn to pay Collier's debt to it. There was no evidence to support a claim of a sale of the corn in controversy and that point must be ruled against defendant.

As to the question of demand. Ordinarily when the possession of personal property is rightful in the first instance, as it was in this case, a demand for a return of the possession to the owner is necessary before a suit for conversion can be maintained, but that is not always so. It has been well said that "there can be no doubt that a conversion is shown when one person unlawfully *611 interferes with the property of another and assumes to exercise dominion over it in disregard or in defiance and to the exclusion of the owner's rights. Any such interference with the owner's property and exercise of dominion over it in defiance of and inconsistent with his rights constitutes a conversion." [Bank v. Railroad, 158 Mo. App. 519, 528-29, 138 S.W. 915; Miller v. Lange, 84 Mo. App. 219.]

The whole controversy in this case was bottomed on defendant's contention that it had the right to retain sufficient of the corn covered by plaintiff's chattel mortgage to pay Collier's debt to it. It denied all the time that plaintiff could take that corn and apply it or its value to the payment of Collier's debt to it secured by the chattel mortgage on the corn. This was a denial of plaintiff's right in the corn and the assertion of a right in defendant to retain it. That being true, a formal demand by plaintiff for possession of the corn would have been a useless thing. Defendant had already given plaintiff to understand that it meant to retain the corn for its own purposes and this amounted to a conversion of it and made a formal demand unnecessary and useless. The purpose of a demand is to make sure of defendant's attitude and claim and to give him an opportunity to set the matter right before being sued and under ordinary circumstances when the possession is rightful, it remains rightful and there can be no conversion until there is a demand under the rights of the other party and the refusal to surrender possession on demand is a refusal to recognize those rights and constitutes the conversion. On the other hand, when the party in possession of the property is asserting his own rights thereto in opposition to the rights of the owner and it is apparent from the conduct of the party toward the property that possession would be refused if demanded, a conversion is already complete and demand is unnecessary. The office of a demand is evidential and not creative. It is the act of the party in possession in opposition to the rights of the owner that constitutes conversion. The demand and refusal *612 to deliver is the evidence which shows the holding of the party in possession to be in opposition to the rights of the owner. When the character of the holding of the party in possession is already ascertained or can be shown without demand being made, then a demand could serve no useful purpsoe and is not a necessary prerequisite to the right to maintain a suit for conversion. [Lafayette County Bank v. Metcalf Moore Co.,40 Mo. App. 494, 502; Ward v. Transfer Storage Co., 119 Mo. App. 83, 90, 95 S.W. 964.]

It is further contended by defendant that when plaintiff refused to permit defendant to retain sufficient corn to liquidate its claim against Collier that it was then agreed between plaintiff and defendant that if defendant would assist Collier to raise sufficient money to pay one-half of the debt due plaintiff, that defendant should be released and permitted to retain the corn and that defendant had complied with its part of the contract. Plaintiff's witnesses denied that such a contract was made. If this agreement was made, it was without consideration and void. On the admitted facts the corn received by defendant from Collier was of greater value than one-half of Collier's debt to plaintiff. Collier's note to plaintiff was for $2275. One-half of this is $1137.50. The total value of the corn as shown by the "settlement sheets" tendered plaintiff by defendant was $1230.62. The value of the corn had been fixed by defendant in these "settlement sheets" and hence if it kept the corn, it was indebted to plaintiff for more than one-half the amount of plaintiff's note. If defendant, therefore, had paid plaintiff in cash all that it would have owed plaintiff by keeping the corn, it would have paid more than one-half the note and if by paying one-half the note, it could have been released and permitted to retain the corn, it would have been the gainer instead of a loser and so it was entirely unnecessary for it to have assisted Collier to raise one-half the note in order to secure to itself the benefit of the alleged agreement. The court refused to submit the defense based on this alleged *613 contract to the jury and we think it did so rightfully.

The instruction to the jury given on behalf of plaintiff which defined conversion was clearly erroneous but as we view this record, the plaintiff was entitled to recover on the facts conceded by defendant and that being true, the error in that instruction could not have been harmful.

Finding no reversible error, the judgment is affirmed.Farrington, J., and Bradley, J., concur. *614