210 P. 850 | Ariz. | 1922
In this action the Consolidated National Bank of Tucson seeks to recover from C. J. Cunningham the possession of a 1914 model Cadillac automobile or its value. It obtained possession of the car by filing the required affidavit and bond, but the jury by its verdict said that the defendant, Cunningham, was its owner and entitled to its possession, and that its value at the time of the commencement of the action was $1,000, and in pursuance of the right conferred by paragraph 1614, Civil Code of 1913, he elected to take its value instead of the car itself, whereupon judgment was entered in his favor for this sum. From this judgment the bank appeals.
The complaint alleges that “the actual value of said property is approximately the sum of $1,000,” and the affidavit and bond are to the same effect, while the answer contains an allegation that its actual value is $1,200. One of appellant’s witnesses, a garageman, testified, however, that “at the present time I would not give $200 for it,” and immediately afterwards he was asked on cross-examination:
Then this colloquy followed:
“The Court: Gentlemen, aren’t you bound by these allegations on that question?
“Mr. Wright: I think so.
“Mr. Hartman: I don’t think so.
“Mr. Wright: If they allege a thousand dollars, they can’t go back on that.
“The Court: You can’t allege it is worth a thousand and then seek to prove it was worth less.”
At the conclusion of the evidence the court charged the jury,, in part, as follows:
“Another question that you will have to pass upon is the value of the property. The plaintiff in its affidavit, which is filed in this case, and in its complaint, says the property is worth a thousand dollars. The defendant says it is worth $1,200. Both parties are bound by their statement, and the jury, of course, is bound by the issues presented by the pleadings. So that while it is for you to find the value of the property, under the pleadings in this case you cannot find it to be less than a thousand dollars nor more than $1,200, within that narrow margin. You can find either one of those figures or anywhere between them, . accordingly as you think the evidence warrants. You will find that value and insert it in the form of verdict to be furnished you. ...
“If you find for the plaintiff, the form of your verdict will be: ‘We, the jury, duly impaneled and sworn, upon our oaths, do find that the plaintiff is the owner of the property described in the complaint, and that it was at' the time this action was brought entitled to its possession, and that the value of said property at the time this action was commenced was the sum of’ blank dollars, inserting the value that you find of the property at the time the suit was commenced.”
The statute is silent as to the facts a complaint seeking the recovery of specific property shall contain, but it does provide what an affidavit shall show when the plaintiff desires to take immediate possession, and the value of the property is one of the things enumerated. Paragraph 1604, Civ. Code 1913. But the affidavit forms no part of the complaint, for whether a cause of action has been stated must be determined by the averments of the latter unaided by the affidavit, the proceedings to obtain possession being’ ancillary to the main action and in no sense essential to it. Jantzen v. Emanuel German Baptist Church, 27 Okl. 473, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 659, 112 Pac.
It is true, a judgment against a plaintiff, or defendant either, in possession, should be for both the property and its value, the successful party electing within a certain time which he will take. But as a basis for such a judgment the statute provides that the court or jury, whichever tries the issue, shall find the value of the property, and in determining this the question naturally arises: Since the market price of many classes of personal property fluctuates greatly and depreciation of others from various causes frequently occurs, which shall it be — the value at the time of taking or at the time of trial? This inquiry was answered by the territorial Supreme Court in Gray v. Robinson, 4 Ariz. 24, 33 Pac. 712, in the following language:
“Appellants complain that the trial court assessed the value of the property at the time of the trial, and not at the time of taking. We find no error in the ruling of the court in this respect. Whatever may be the rule in the ordinary action of replevin, under statutes similar to our own, which provide for
When this decision was rendered, title 10 of the statutes of 1887, designated “Claim and Delivery,” was in force, and it was practically a rescript of the replevin statute of Missouri. In 1901, however, some of its provisions were modified and, as modified, carried forward into the Code of 1913 as chapter 10, part 9, title 6, under the heading “Replevin”; hut the changes were not such as to lessen the weight of this holding as authority on this proposition. It was required then, though not in the exact language of the present statute, that the trier of the facts, whether court- or jury, find the value of the property where the claim of the party out of possession was established, and that the judgment be for the possession or the value at his election. There is no difference in effect, however, between a judgment for the property or its value at the election of the successful party, and one for both the property and its value where the statute requires an election within a certain time afterwards to make the award effective. If the successful party elect to take the alternative judgment, title vests immediately in the loser, and though it has been determined that the party out of possession is the owner and entitled to the property, yet the law compels the loser to purchase it, if the winner so chooses, at the value fixed by the judgment. An exchange or sale of this character, though forced, should be fair and equitable, and it is evidently the intent of the statute that this result is had by using the valuation at the time of trial rather than that at the time of taking; and that
Another very persuasive reason why value, which is in no sense the real issue but stated merely for the purpose of an alternative judgment, should be found as of the date of trial, is that replevin actions are often instituted and the affidavit and replevin bond filed in haste, when the plaintiff has not the time to ascertain the value with sufficient accuracy to enable him to state it correctly, either in the complaint or the affidavit; and frequently the spirit of the party in possession is so antagonistic that it is practically impossible and perhaps unwise to attempt to investigate it. It seems unreasonable and unfair, in view of these facts, to compel the plaintiff to state at his peril in advance and with exactness the value of the property and prevent him from showing after-wards for any purpose whatever its true value merely because he has alleged it to be a certain amount, notwithstanding the circumstances may have been such that he could not have known it fully or accurately. Value alleged in the complaint is at best an admission of value at the time of the commencement of the action, and if there is no evidence of a change between then and the date of trial, it might seem proper to give effect to the admission as fixing the value at the time of the institution of the action; but in order “to give effect to the intent and spirit of the statute, and secure a just and fair alternative judgment thereunder,” said the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Ferguson v. Comfort, 194 Mo. App. 423, 184 S. W. 1192, “nothing short of an unequivocal admission of the valúe at the time of
Since, therefore, valuation at the commencement of the action and at the time of the trial are so often not the same, and in finding the value the court or jury is to be guided by its worth at the date of trial, a statement in the complaint or affidavit of the value at any other time is immaterial and not binding upon the pleader. The plaintiff should have been permitted to show the valuation at the time of trial, a fact he could not foresee at the institution of the suit; hence the instruction that the jury should find the value to be at least $1,000, the amount alleged and admitted, was error. If the value of the property at the commencement of the trial had been material, undoubtedly appellant would have been bound by its allegation, and, since it was admitted, no proof of it would have been necessary, Perley v. Goar, 22 Ariz. 146, 195 Pac. 532; this would have been true even though the answer, instead of admitting, merely failed to controvert it, for it would then have been treated as admitted, this court having held on numerous occasions, in accordance with the rule prevailing in all jurisdictions where it has not been provided otherwise by statute, that “there is a rule of evidence which obviates proof of those things well pleaded and not denied in the answer.” Yates v. Russell, 20 Ariz. 338, 180 Pac. 910. But an action in replevin is sui generis, and the rule that one is bound by his
“It is true, as respondent asserts, that one is ordinarily bound by the allegations of his pleading. See Railroad v. Iron Works Co., 117 Mo. App. loc. cit. 164, 94 S. W. 726, and eases cited. But the action of replevin is sui generis, and the application of this rule to the present case may well be doubted. There is ample authority for holding that in any event the allegation of value in a petition in an action of replevin is to be regarded as a mere matter of form in pleading (see Bailey v. Ellis, 21 Ark. 488; Hawkins v. Johnson, 3 Blackf. [Ind.] 46; 18 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 541; Wells on Replevin, 2d ed., § 680); though in some jurisdictions the allegation of value appears to be held material (see 34 Cyc., pp. 1472, 1473). Our statute requires the value to be stated in the affidavit. Section 2637, Rev. Stats. 1909. This serves to fix the amount of the replevin or the forthcoming bond, and is a necessary element of. the affidavit. But we take it that it is not material that the petition allege the value. While this by no means concludes the matter before us, we are constrained to hold that the value stated in both the affidavit and petition herein should not be regarded as conclusive on the question of the value of the property at the time of the trial.”
There is a lack of harmony in the decisions on this question, the authorities on both views being cited in the Missouri case just quoted; but we think the rule announced in Gray v. Robinson, supra, and in the Missouri case, is correct under the replevin statute of this state on the proposition of proving the value at the time of trial, and that this holding leads to the result reached on the materiality of the allegation of value.