25 Mo. App. 328 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action for damages for the conversion of six sea otter skins, claimed in the petition to be “of unusually large size and quality.” The damages claimed in the petition are one thousand eight hundred dollars. The -answer admits that six sea otter skins were delivered by the plaintiff, Mrs. Doty, to the defendant in the year 1877, as charged in her petition, but sets up that they were known as “ sea otter pup skins ”; that they were delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant for the purpose of having the defendant send them to New York to ascertain what they were worth; that be did send them to New York for this purpose; that that they were returned to him with the information that they were not salable; that, shortly after they were returned, the defendant’s store, in which they were kept, was destroyed by fire without fault or negligence on his part; that the skins were injured by the fire; that one of them was either wholly destroyed or damaged to such an extent as to be rendered worthless; that all of them were somewhat damaged, but that the defendant caused them to be renovated and put in as good condition as possible, and in the year 1883 delivered two of them to the plaintiff; and that the other three are in the defendant’s possession, and he has at all times been ready, and now is ready, to deliver them to the plaintiff upon pay
The trial occupied parts of two days. The evidence was long and conflicting. A detailed statement of it does not seem necessary for our decision. If the plaintiff’s evidence, supplemented by that of the defendant, as to dates, was true, and the jury must have believed it, she delivered to the defendant, not in 1877, but in the latter part of the year, 1876, six large sea otter skins, four of which were about five feet long and about three feet wide, and two of which were somewhat smaller, which she had received as a present from her son, who had obtained them while cruising among the Aleutian Islands ; that at least four of these skins were what is known in the trade as “prime skins”; that is, skins of the grown animal, and the other two, at least, “cub skins,” or skins of the half grown animal; that these prime skins were worth in London, the nearest general market for such furs, perhaps one hundred and fifty dollars each; that the defendant kept these skins for nearly a year, namely, until November, 1877, when his store in which they were kept was destroyed by a fire; that thereafter he pretended that the skins had been destroyed in the fire, and in response to repeated applications to find them and deliver them to the plaintiff, excused delivery with various pretexts, until some time in 1883, when he sent to the plaintiff a small sea otter pup skin, which the plaintiff at once informed him was not one of the skins which she had delivered to him ; and, finally, that, at the trial, he brought three other sea otter pup skins into court and pretended that they were what remained of the skins which the plaintiff had delivered to him. The plaintiff ’s evidence showed that sea otter pup skins were worth, on an average, in New
In rebuttal, three witnesses for the plain tiff, namely, the plaintiff herself, her son, who gave her the skins, and General McNeil, formerly a furrier, who had inspected the skins at the plaintiff’s house before she had delivered them to the defendant, testified in positive terms that the four skins produced in court were not the skins which the plaintiff had delivered to the defendant;
I. The court gave the following instruction at the request of the plaintiff: “The jury are instructed by the court to find for the plaintiff, if, from the evidence, they believe that the six furs of the plaintiff were saved from the fire which destroyed the building occupied by the defendant, and thereafter the defendant, on demand of the plaintiff, refused to return said furs to the plaintiff. And the measure of the plaintiff’s damages, in the event the jury find for the plaintiff as to any or all of the said furs, will be the reasonable market value of the said furs in St. Louis, or, if there was no market there, then at the market for the said furs nearest to St. Louis, at the time when the defendant so refused to return said furs, and interest thereon at six per centum per annum, from the commencement of the suit to this date.”
, Concerning this instruction, it should be stated that there was no evidence whatever in the record as to “ the reasonable market value of the said furs in St. Louis, ’ ’ and all the evidence showed that such furs had no market value in this city. In so far as it contained this element, it submitted to the jury an hypothesis in respect of the measure of damages, as to which there was no evidence — a circumstance which might not be regarded as important in view of the evidence, but for the extraordinary award of damages which the jury made.
II. The court refused the following instruction, requested by the defendant: “The court instructs the jury that, if they find from the evidence that any of the furs now in possession of the defendant and shown to the jury, are the furs received by him from the plaintiff, and if they find that the defendant has any just claim against the said furs for costs paid by him in shipping the said furs, or for storage thereon, then the plaintiff is
The court, however, gave this instruction, after adding thereto the following words: “Unless the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant absolutely refused to surrender said furs to the plaintiff.”
This instruction seems to embody two errors, one of them working against the plaintiff and the other against the defendant. The instruction, as requested, might have been refused on the ground that there was not a particle of evidence in the case that the defendant had ■ever made any claim against the plaintiff for the costs of shipping and storing the furs, and that there was not a particle of evidence as to the value of such services. There was no evidence that the defendant had ever refused to deliver them because charges were not paid, or for any other reason, except that he did not have them, or could not find them; nor was there any evidence that the plaintiff had ever been requested to pay charges, or had ever refused to pay reasonable charges, but the evidence showed that she had offered to pay such charges. The instruction would, therefore, have put a misleading hypothesis to the jury. On the other hand, there was no evidence in the case that the defendant had ever “ absolutely refused ” to surrender to the plaintiff the particular furs mentioned in this instruction, namely, those which were in his possession at the trial and which had been shown to the jury. The instruction as amended, therefore, contained an additional misleading hypothesis.
III. The award of damages made by the jury can not be supported upon any rational interpretation of the evidence in the case. • The trial court was right in judging that such a verdict ought not to be allowed to stand. The jury had evidently come to the conclusion, speaking plainly, that the defendant had endeavored to defraud the plaintiff out of six sea otter skins of great value, and that he had attempted, by a trick, to substitute in their
TV. The St. Louis furrier, Gfosselling, introduced
It is ordered that the judgment of the circuit court be reversed and the cause remanded.