89 Mass. 470 | Mass. | 1863
This is an action of tort, in the nature of trover, to recover the value of the machinery described in the declaration, alleged to have been converted by the defendant to his own use. It appears that the machinery had been placed by Waterman & Litchfield, by whom it was formerly owned, in a workshop, which, together with the tract of land on which it stood, was mortgaged by them first to Mrs. Russell, and after-wards to the Medford Loan Fund Association, to secure the payment of debts respectively due to them. The machinery in the workshop was also for a like purpose mortgaged by them to the plaintiff, who had caused such proceedings to be had in relation to it that the right of redemption had become foreclosed prior to the 20th of June 1862, so that he had then acquired an absolute title to the property. On the 16th of May of the same year the defendant, as president of the Loan Fund Association, and acting in their behalf, entered upon the land, for breach of the condition of their mortgage, to take possession for the purpose of foreclosure, and caused a certificate thereof to be duly made and signed by witnesses and recorded, according to the provisions of the statute and the requirements of law in such cases. It does not appear to have been shown that the Loan Fund Association, either by the defendant or by any other person, continued to retain possession of the premises after that
On the 20th of June the plaintiff sold all his interest under his mortgage title in the machinery to Pyam Cushing for $1000, and took his promissory note therefor, and gave to him a receipted bill of sale. The next day Cushing went to the mill for the purpose of taking possession of the machinery, which still remained there in the same situation in which it was when possession was taken of the real estate by the Loan Fund Association. He found Taylor there, and told him of his intention to remove the machinery. Taylor forbade the removal, and in answer to an inquiry addressed to him said that he made the objection by the authority of Mr. Curtis. It is obvious that it thus became a very material inquiry upon the trial, whether the refusal of Taylor, upon the demand of Cushing, to deliver the machinery to him, constituted a conversion of it by the defendant.
The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that, as he was acting merely as the agent of the Loan Fund Association, he could not upon the evidence in the case be rendered liable for the alleged conversion of the machinery. But the court declined to accede to that request; and, instead
These instructions, considered only as abstract propositions, do not embrace any erroneous statement of the law; but in their application to the evidence which had been adduced, and to the questions in issue, they were not free from very serious objection.
In the first place, instead of taking it for granted, as the court appears to have done, that what occurred in the interview on the 21st of June between Cushing and Taylor was an assumption on the part of the latter of the control or dominion of the property, to the exclusion or in defiance of the plaintiff’s right therein, thé jury should have been advised that they were to consider the proof of what took place on that occasion in connection with all the other evidence in the ease bearing upon the question, and determine in view of the whole of it whether there was such a clear and absolute refusal to deliver the property as would constitute a conversion of it. It does not appear that the defendant or Taylor ever in fact used or interfered with the machinery belonging to the plaintiff; and therefore the possession of it, which resulted only from the occupation of the building in which it was placed, involved no violation of his rights. And as he claimed all the machinery, to some of which he had certainly no title, it would be proper to consider whether the direction given to Taylor to allow none of it to be removed, accompanied as it was with the further direction to use no force to prevent it, was anything more than a mere notice that claims in opposition to his would be insisted upon by the association. None of the machinery was attempted to be concealed or removed from the situation in which it had been placed by the mortgagors, and in which the plaintiff had himself left it.
It was urged by the defendant that the plaintiff could not avail himself of the evidence to show a conversion of the property by the refusal of Taylor to deliver it to Cushing upon his demand, because the whole of that transaction occurred after the property had been sold to Cushing, and before the contract of sale had been rescinded. But this objection cannot be sustained. If the plaintiff had in other respects a right of action when his suit was commenced, he might introduce any competent evidence to show that the defendant had unlawfully converted the property to his own use. A refusal to deliver it to any person who had a right to demand it was evidence tending to prove such conversion, and therefore the plaintiff was rightly allowed to prove the facts which had actually at any time occurred.
If the contract of sale had been rescinded, and the plaintiff was the owner of the property at the time of the commencement of his action, it might be maintained, although the defendant had previously refused to deliver it to Cushing, and had thus made himself liable for its value by conversion of it to his own use. Pattison v. Robinson, 5 M. & S. 105.
Upon the question concerning the amount of damages to be recovered, the court should have adopted the prayer of the defendant, and have instructed the jury that his having given to the plaintiff notice, after the sale of the premises by Mrs. Russell, that the association had relinquished all claim to the machinery, (which appeared by the testimony of the plaintiff himself,) and the fact that the machinery had never been appropriated to their use, nor moved from the place where it had always been, should be considered by them in mitigation of damages. Greenfield Bank v. Leavitt, 17 Pick. 1. Exceptions sustained.
cited Pattison v. Robinson, 5 M. & S. 105; Stephens v. Elwall, 4 M. & S. 259; Clark v. Whitaker, 19 Conn. 319; Thorp v. Burling, 11 Johns. 285; Cranch v. White, 1 Bing. N. C. 414, and 1 Scott, 314; Perkins v. Smith, 1 Wils. 328; Judson v. Cook, 11 Barb. 642 ; Cram v. Thissell, 35 Maine, 86.