14 Or. 255 | Or. | 1886
The appellant commenced an action in the court below against the respondents, to recover damages for an alleged conversion of a quantity of wheat which the appellant had stored with the respondent Blair at Corvallis, Benton County, Oregon. Blair had two warehouses in which he
Upon the trial of the action, the respondent’s counsel con
The theory of the appellant’s counsel seems to have ..been that they had a right, after proving the amount of wheat appellant had in the warehouse at the time of the alleged conversion, to show how much the Flouring Mills Co. took out of it, how much Henkle & Co. took out of it, and how much Hamilton & Co. took out of it; and after ascertaining what portion of the wheat so taken belonged to him, recover from said several companies the amount taken by them, respectively-, of his wheat.
It must be conceded, I think, that these several companies acted independently of each other in what they did in regard to the taking the wheat. There is not the slightest trace of testimony in the case, as I can discover, that they combined or cooperated in taking away any wheat from the warehouse in question. The taking was at different times, and clearly several acts, and resulted from their several motives. Each company took the wheat they supposed they were severally entitled to, and at their own instance, and upon their own responsibility. And unless the appellant’s counsel can maintain the theory before indicated, the nonsuit granted by the circuit judge must stand.
There were a number of exceptions taken to the rulings of the court at the trial, in excluding testimony offered on the part of the appellant; but they are unimportant, unless the appellant had the right to recover severally against the respondents, as before indicated. The view the appellant’s counsel suggested in reference to this question seems hardly tenable, yet it has been presented with much more force and ability, and is sustained by many of the earlier decisions. (Jackson v. Woods et al., 5 Johns. 278, and cases there cited.) That
This case is very similar in principle to that of Jackson v. Hazen, 2 Johns, 437. There the action was against five defendants, who entered into the consent rule jointly, and pleaded jointly; but it appeared upon the trial that two of them occupied distinct parcels of the premises in severalty, and that the other three possessed the residue of the premises jointly. It was contended for the plaintiff, that all the facts necessary to be proved in an action for trespass were admitted by the consent rule, and that the defendants could have prevented the difficulty and hardship that might arise out of a claim to the mesne profits by appearing separately for their distinct parcels ; but the court held that the plaintiff was bound to prove a joint possession of all the defendants, and that the two defen-. dants who held separately were entitled to judgment against the plaintiff. Spencer, J., who delivered the opinion of the court, said that the only case which seemed to warrant a general judgment against all the defendants was that of Claxmore v. Scarle et al., 1 Ld. Ray. 729, which stated the practice to be, where some of the defendants appeared at the trial and confessed lease, entry and ouster, and the others did not, that with regard to such as did not appear, a verdict was to be.
These two cases have been referred to in subsequent decisions of the New York courts, but have never been cited except in ejectment proceedings, as they were conducted at common law; and all that is said by the court in either of them is only authority in ejectment suits as formerly prosecuted. The doctrine these cases attempted to establish wasevidently intended to soften the rigor of the rules in ejectment cases. A strict enforcement of them left the defenbant no grounds to stand upon, except to defeat the lessor’s claim of title to the premises, as he was compelled to confess the leasing, entry and ouster as a condition upon winch he was permitted to defend. This, however, operated as no hardship, except when the action was against several, each occupying distinct parcels of the demanded premises. In that case, if the fiction of law applicable to that class of actions were canned out literally, the defendants would each have to confess, or be deemed to have confessed, the ouster as to the whole, and be liable to the whole amount of mesne profits. And to avoid so palpable an injustice, it was necessary either to compel the plaintiff to enter into a separate consent rule with each defendant, or not allow a recovery without proving a joint possession of all the defendants, as in Jackson v. Hazen, supra ; or by allowing a finding of guilty against each defendant separately, as to the part of the premises in his sep
Whatever may have been the rule upon the subject in the English courts, no such practice ever obtained in the United States, unless under special statutory provision. Nor do I believe that the later English authorities recognize any such doctrine. Chitty says: “And if a joint action of trespass be brought against several persons, the plaintiff cannot declare for an assault and battery by one, and for the taking away of goods by the others, because these trespasses are of several natures. And in trover, against several defendants, all cannot be found guilty in the same court without proof of a joint conversion by all.” (1 Chitty Pl. 86.) And it is declared in note i. to the case of Wilbraham v. Snow, 2 Saund. Pt. 1, p. 47, in these words : “ It is plain that several defendants cannot be found guilty in trover without evidence of a joint conversion ; therefore, where bankrupts and their assignees were joined as defendants in an action of trover, and a verdict passed against all the defendants, upon evidence that the bankrupts, before their bankruptcy, had converted the goods of the plaintiff by pledging them without authority, and that the assignees after the bankruptcy had refused to deliver them up on demand, the court held that the conversions were separate, and granted a new trial for want of evidence of a joint conversion.” (Citing Nicoll v. Glennie et al., 1 M. & S. 588.) In Add. Torts, Sec. 1321, the same rule is declared, and same reference made to 1 M. &. S. 588. The author further remarks in that section, that “ where an action has been brought against several joint trespassers, the evidence must be confined to the joint offenses in which all are implicated.’’
In Forbes v. Marsh et al., 15 Conn. 384, the court held, where the plaintiff, in an action of trover against B and C, introduced evidence proving a conversion by B only, without the participation or knowledge of C, that it was not then competent to prove a distinct conversion by C.
This was the predicament the appellant found himself in at the trial of this case. He had joined the three parties: The Flouring Mills Co., ITenkle & Co., and Hamilton & Co., in a single action, and then attempted to introduce evidence proving a conversion by one of them only. He could only be permitted to prove an act of conversion upon the part of one of the parties, under an offer to show that the others participated in the action in some way, and unless he could make such showing he would be confined to his claim against the one party. Or he might have been permitted to show that all the parties took and carried away the wheat at different times, under an offer to show that there had been a combination entered
The difficulty in this class of cases has been in attempting to .apply the general rule that torts are joint and sever'al, and that in a joint action against several defendants, one or more may be found guilty, and the others acquitted; but in the class of cases to which that rule applies, as was said by Judge Dillon, in Turner v. Hitchcock, 20 Iowa, 316, the injury sued for is an entirety. “ The injury is single, though the wrong doers may be numerous.” It has no application to a case where distinct injuries have been committed by the several defendants. If B were to go to A’s barn, and unlawfully carry away ten bushels of his wheat, and C, in like manner, were to go at another time and carry away thirty bushels more, and there had been no concert of action between them in the matter, but each had acted for himself, it would be absurd to sue them together in one action for the conversion of the amount of wheat so taken. Yet this is the position the appellant occupied in the case at circuit, and he either had to confine his proof to one of the acts and to the party committing it, or obtain leave of the court to amend his complaint, after the proofs disclosed the dilemma he was in, or submit to a nonsuit. There could have been only one recovery in the case, and that had to be against the party or parties who did the act for which it was obtained.
In Currier v. Swan, 63 Maine, 323, in an action of trespass for an assault against four parties, the jury rendered a verdict in regular form against them all, but appended to it an apportionment of the damages among them severally. The court held that the appended part must be rejected; that but one verdict could he rendered; and that, therefore, the damages