Eads v. Wagner

153 N.W. 302 | S.D. | 1915

SMITH, J.

Action to recover possession of specific personal property. A demurrer to the complaint was overruled, and defendant appeals.

Appellant assigns six grounds of insufficiency in the allegations of the complaint, the sixth being that “the value of the property in controversy is not alleged.”

Respondent relies upon the decision of this court in Johnson v. Hillenbrand, 18 S. D. 446, 101 N. W. 33. The precise question was not passed upon in that case, although it must be conceded that the language used in the opinion would appear to sustain respondent’s contention. It was there, held, upon demurrer to the complaint, that an allegation of the value of plaintiff’s interest in the property was a sufficient allegation of value, under the ruling of this court in National Bank of Commerce v. Feeney, 9 S D. 550, 70 N. W. 874, 46 L. R. A. 732. The decision in the latter case, however, did not involve an entire absence of an allegation of value, but turned upon the amount of the alternative judgment to which plaintiff was entitled after the defendant hadi given a redelivery bond and was in possession of the mortgaged' property. The value of the property was found to be $800, while the value of the mortgagee’s interest was $510.50. It was ruled that the alternative judgment should have been for the latter sum, and the judgment was accordingly *549modified. This ruling was clearly correct.- We are satisfied, however, that the decision in Johnson v. Hillenbrand was wrong in holding that an allegation of value was not necessary in the complaint, basing the holding upon the ground that:

“The statute requiring the statement o-f the value of the property only applies to affidavits made in actions in claim and delivery, when the immediate possession is sought to be obtained (section 185, subd. 5, Code Civ. Proc. 1903); but no such requirement is made where the action to recover possession of the property is unaccompanied by a claim for . immediate delivery.”

The court in that case also said-:

“The plaintiff alleged! in' his complaint the value of his interest in the property or the damages sustained by him by reason of the wrongful detention; of the same, and this is sufficient, ‘etc.”

[1] It is true an allegation of the value of a mortgagee’s" interest in the mortgaged property may be a proper and sufficient allegation- as the basis of an alternative judgment, in an action by the mortgagee to recover possession of mortgaged property; but that rule would not obviate the necessity of an allegation of value, where plaintiff claims right to possession as absolute owner. The action to recover possession of specific personal property is founded upon the provisions of section 2338, Civ. Code.

“Any person having the possession or control of a particular article of personal property, of which he is not the owner, may be compelled specifically to- deliver it to the person entitled to its * * * possession.”

[2] The proceeding ordinarily spoken of as “claim and delivery of personal property” is merely ancillary to an action for the recovery of possession of specific personal property, and is a provisional remedy “in the action..”

The California Supreme Court, in - construing their statute, which is identical with our own, say:

“Courts and law writers haVe sometimes inadvertently spoken of the code ‘action of claim and delivery’ as if there were really here a form of action * * * at common law, such as ‘debt,’ ‘covenant,’ ‘replevin,’ ‘trover,’ etc. But we have here .no forms of civil actions. We have only one form of action, which has no name; so that an action cannot be here defeated, as it could have *550been at common law, because not properly named. Sections 509 to 520 of the Code -of Civil Procedure (our -sections 184 to 195) are preceded by the heading ‘Claim and Delivery of Personal Property/ but the sections themselves show the meaning of this heading. They merely provide an auxiliary remedy by which, when a party- bring-s an action to recover personal property, he may ‘claim’ that the property be immediately delivered to him at .the commencement of the action arid- without awaiting the trial. * * * These sections merely give to -a plaintiff suing to recover personal property an auxiliary remedy, very similar to the auxiliary remedy of attachment given to a plaintiff suing upon a contract for the direct payment of money, and to the auxiliary remedy under the head of ‘arrest and bail’ and ‘injunction- during litigation.’ But it is no more proper to- speak of an action ‘of claim and delivery/ than to- speak of an action ‘of attachment.’ ” Faulkner v. First Nat. Bank, 130 Cal. 258, 62 P-ac. 463.

[3, 4] The affidavit required where the provisional remedy is invoked in an action to recover possession Of specific personal property, is independent of the allegations of the complaint in the action, and the reason for requiring an allegation of value in the complaint rests' upon other and different grounds than the specific statutory requirement of an allegation of value in the affidavit. Under our Code, there is but one form of action, which is known as a “civil action.” In that action the complaint must state the facts upon which the relief sought — that is, the judgment — is to be predicated.. Section 313, Code of Civil Procedure, .prescribes the judgment to be entered in this class of cases:

“In an action to recover the possession of personal property, the judgment for the plaintiff may be for the possession, or for the recovery of possession, or the value thereof in case a delivery cannot 'be had, and of damages ior the detention. If the property has been delivered to the plaintiff, and the defendant claim a return thereof, judgment for the defendant may be for a return of the property, or the value thereof in case a return cannot be had, and damages for taking and witholding the same.”

The first clause of this section relates to the judgment for the plaintiff, which may be “for possession,”' or for the “recovery of *551possession or the value thereof, in case a delivery cannot be had.” If the successful plaintiff has invoked the provisional remedy and has acquired and retained possession of the ¡property, • the judgment may be for possession alone. But where the plaintiff hasi not availed himself of the provisional remedy, or where the defendant has rebonded the property under section 189, Code Civ. Proc., the plaintiff’s judgment- is for recovery of possession, or the value in case a delivery cannot 'be had. On the other hand, if the defendant is successful at the trial, and the property has been delivered to the plaintiff, and the defendant claims a return thereof, the judgment is for a return of the property, or the value thereof, in case a return cannot be had. By section 184, supra, the plaintiff, at the time of issuing the summons or at any time before the answer, may invoke the provisional remedy. By section 189, the defendant, within three days after the taking and service of notice upon himself, and before delivery of the property to the plaintiff, may rebond and retain possession of the property. Under these various provisions of the law, the value of the property becomes an essential element of the verdict and the judgment, whether for plaintiff or defendant, with perhaps a single exception, and that is where the plaintiff has invoked -the provisional remedy, the defendant has failed to rebond the property, and the- plaintiff recovers the verdict in the action. But this exception cannot be held to- affect the rule which requires proper and sufficient allegations in a pleading to sustain any judgment which may be entered in the action. In the old action of replevin, the sole issue, and the only judgment which could be entered, in the action, related to possession alone, and an allegation of value was unnecessary and immaterial, while in trover and conversion an allegation of value was necessary and material as the foundation for the judgment, though it seems to have been held that a general allegation of damages was sufficient to permit proof of value, without a specific allegation of value. But the Code abolishes the old forms of action and substitutes a single form of action, and expressly or impliedly prescribes the relief or judgment which may be obtained.

In the case of Lomme v. Sweeney, 1 Mont. 584, in an action for recovery of personal property, under statutes similar .to our own, the court said:

*552“In a complaint in an action of replevin, the plaintiff states the facts which entitle him to a judgment. If he wishes a judgment for the value of the property in case the possession of the same is not delivered to him, he must allege its value. This is the basis of his right to recover such a judgment. * * * It is doubtful if the defendant in an action of replevin could 'base his right to a judgment for the value of the property, without alleging the value of the same in the answer. The answer of a defendant in an action of repelvin claiming a return of property, or, in case that cannot be had, a judgment in the alternative for its value, is in the nature of a cross-complaint, and must state facts sufficient to warrant the court in giving the relief demanded.”

In American German Bank v. Gray & Dudley Hardware Co., 129 Ky. 105, 105 S. W. 393, that court says:

“Forms of action were abolished by the Code. All that is now required is to state the facts constituting a cause of action, without reference to the form of the petition. The present action of claim and delivery requires a particular description of the propety claimed, and also the separate value of each aricle, to be stated. The very purpose of stating the separate value of each article is to enable the court to render judgment in case the defendant fails to deliver the property. Indeed, the action of claim and delivery takes the place and has in it all the elements of detinue, replevin, and trover. If the party in possession has converted the property, and no longer has it in his possession, he is liable for the value thereof.”

Section 273, Code of Civil Procedure, provides:

“In an action for the recovery of specific personal property, if the property has not been delivered to the plaintiff, or the defendant, by his answer, claim' a return thereof, the jury, if their verdict be in favor of the plaintiff, or if, being in favor of the defendant, the3>-' also find that he is entitled to a return thereof, must find' the value of the property, and, if so instructed, the value of specific portions thereof, and may at the same time assess the damages, if any are claimed in the complaint or answer, which the prevailing party has sustained by reason of the taking or detention of such property.”

Under a similar statute, the Supreme Court of Indiana, in *553Jackson v. Morgan, 167 Ind. 528, 78 N. E. 633, say:

“It is evident that these sections contemplate that, whether the verdict and judgment be for * * * the recovery or return of the property, the. value thereof, and all damages for its taking or 'detention, must be settled and determined in the action of replevin. * * * The claim for damages in the action of replevin, by either party, when there is judgment for the recovery or return of the property, includes the value of the property, as well as the other damages to -which -he may be entitled. This claim is entire and indivisible, and a party cannot recover a part of it in one action and subsequently maintain an action for the remainder.”

The complaint in this case alleges that the defendant, as sheriff, by virtue of an execution issued from a court of competent jurisdiction, levied upon the property in controversy, and at the time of making the levy, served on plaintiff a notice of levy; that within five days plaintiff made a written and verified schedule claiming the property levied upon as exempt, served a copy thereof upon defendant, and demanded a return of the prope-ty; that defendant refused to release and return said property to plaintiff, and still refuses so to do. It is therefore conceded that the property is in possession of the defendant, and, if judgment should go for plaintiff upon the issues raised by the demurrer, such judgment must be for a return of the property or its value. We reach the conclusion, therefore, that, under a claim, as absolute owner, an allegation of value is. material and essential in an action to recover possession of specific property under our Code, and in this particular the rule announced in Johnson v. Hillenbrand should at least be limited to cases in which the party -claim® by virtue of a lien or other qualified interest.

We find it unnecessary to examine the remaining alleged grounds of insufficiency of the complaint, as we shall assume that such questions will be eliminated in the trial court. The order overruling the demurrer must be reversed, for the reasons hereinbefore stated, and the cause remanded for further poceeding-s according to law.