129 A. 718 | Conn. | 1925
Our disposition of defendant's assignment of error, that the acts of the defendant as found by the trial court would not, in any event, make him liable in conversion, will determine the appeal, and hence make unnecessary consideration of other assignments of error.
So far as the finding discloses, defendant returned the goods to the possession of the tenants who had removed them from the theatre, in the same condition and position they were in when received by him, and without demand having been made upon him by the plaintiff for them, and without knowledge or reason to *615
believe that title to them was not in the tenants, but was in plaintiff. We must assume, in the absence of finding to the contrary, that the alleged conversion was made under these circumstances. There is in our reported decisions no better definition and description of a conversion than that given by JUSTICE TORRANCE, in Gilbert v. Walker,
There are two general classes into which conversions are grouped: (1) those where the possession is originally wrongful, and (2) those where it is rightful. The first class comprises a conversion by a wrongful taking, or by an illegal assumption of ownership, or by an illegal user or misuse, or by any other form of possession wrongfully obtained. The second class comprises those where the possession, originally rightful, becomes wrongful by a wrongful detention. Glaze
v. McMillion, 7 Port. (Ala.) 279; Bowers on Conversion, §§ 289-336; Semon v. Adams,
All of these are instances of a tortious taking. Proof of that establishes the conversion, unless it shall appear that the defendant had lawful right to retain the goods, and in the case of a tortious taking no proof is required of a demand for, and refusal to return, the goods. "It is true, that where there is a tortious taking, a demand can no more be necessary than if the action was trespass for the same taking." Thompson
v. Rose,
The second class is where the possession, originally rightful, becomes wrongful by reason thereafter of a wrongful detention, or a wrongful use of the property, or the exercise of an unauthorized dominion over the property. In the last two groups of this class, the wrongful use and the unauthorized dominion, constitute the conversion; therefore no demand for the return of the personal property is required. In the first group, since the possession is rightful and there is no act of conversion, there can be no conversion until the possessor refused to deliver up the property upon demand. Unexplained, the refusal is evidence from which a conversion may be found. Instances of rightful possession of another's property changed to an unlawful *617
exercise of dominion over it by reason of the refusal to deliver it upon demand, are found in:Metropolis Mfg. Co. v. Lynch,
In Lynch v. Beecher,
In Semon v. Adams,
In the case before us, the tenants' possession of the property in controversy was unlawful because it belonged to the owner of the theatre. The property had been attached to the realty so as to have become fixtures. The defendant's bill of sale of these items of property so attached did not convey title to him and he had no title in them to reconvey to the tenants by a conditional bill of sale. There is every indication that he thought he was obtaining security by the bill of sale for the bond he gave for the tenants. The good faith of this transaction up to this point is not attacked. When defendant took the possession of this property from the tenants he did not know that the plaintiff owned it; so that he was in the position of bona fide purchaser. His taking was not tortious. He committed no act of conversion while in possession of these goods by exercising dominion over them, and no demand had been made upon him for them up to the time he returned them to the tenant in the same condition in which he had received them. The facts found do not bring the case within either of the two ways, stated in Parker v. Middlebrook, supra, in which an act of conversion by the defendant could have been shown.
Plaintiff relies upon Semple v. Morganstern,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause remanded with direction to enter judgment for defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.