127 Mo. App. 207 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
This is an action of replevin, the property involved being sixty-five siphon bottles used for bottling seltzer water. Respondent is a concern engaged in St. Louis in the sale of seltzer and mineral waters and appellants are copartners doing business under the style of the Western Bottle Company. The real business of the appellants, as we gather from the evidence, is buying and selling second-hand bottles. The custom of business of the plaintiff company, when it sold seltzer water, was not to sell the bottles; but to require them to be returned! These bottles were worth from fifty to sixty cents each. Sometimes a deposit was-exacted of a purchaser of bottles of seltzer equal to the value of the bottles, so that in case they were not returned the plaintiff would not lose their value; and there is evidence going to show that, when seltzer was sold without a deposit being required of the value of the bottles containing it, their value was collected from the buyer in case they were not returned. That is to say, sometimes the respondent required a deposit and sometimes it did not; and in the latter instances, if the bottles never were returned, their value was collected of the customer. There is also testimony that respondent purchased, at ten cents each, such secondhand bottles as had not been returned to it, from any person into whose hands they happened to come. Respondent not only sold its waters in St. Louis, but in other cities and towns. It had a great deal of difficulty in collecting the bottles sent out to customers on sales of,seltzer and other waters and several expedients were adopted to save the loss. Appellants offered to prove that respondent belonged to an association of companies
It is insisted by respondent’s .counsel and was ruled by the court that, if property is lost or stolen, the finder or purchaser does not acquire title to it as agaiDst the owner, even though he buys in good faith; and no doubt this is sound law. The theory of the proposition as applied to the present case is, that respondent did not lose the title to the bottles it sent out pursuant to sales of its mineral and seltzer waters if the bottles were not returned as agreed, or, even if they were sold or cast away by the purchaser of the waters. Conceding this proposition to be true, it is also true that an owner of property may abandon it; and there is evidence in the present case tending to show the respondent intended to abandon such of its bottles as happened to be thrown away by customers and which might be gathered up indiscriminately and sold to second hand dealers by whomsoever happened to find them. No other meaning can be attached to respondent’s custom of buying its bottles from those dealers except that it recognized the latter’s title. Of course as second-hand bottles were restored in a filthy state, and sometimes, maybe, with the siphons out of order, but a low price was paid for them. On the subject of the abandonment of property under circumstances similar to those in proof, see Haslen v. Lockwood, 37 Conn. 500; Livermore v. White, 74 Maine 452, and the treatment of the subject in 1 Cyc. 3, et seq. These observations are made to show the case as the facts below showed it. Certainly the respondent’s habit of purchasing second-hand bottles from bottle dealers gave the
But what we are to decide in the present case is the propriety of the instruction to the jury to find the value of the bottles and appellants’ interest in case a verdict was returned for them. Inasmuch as the property had been taken out of appellants’ possession by the constable under the writ issued in the present case and turned over to respondent, it was the duty of the jury to find its value if a verdict was given for appellants. [R. S. 1899, sec. 3921.] The statute explicitly says that in all replevin actions where the property has been delivered to a plaintiff and the justice or jury shall find for the defendant, whether the defendant had the right of property or the right of possession only, at the commencement of the suit, shall be found, and if either issue is found in his favor, the value of the property or the value of the possession' shall also be found. What the jury found in the present case, as shown by the verdict, was that defendants were entitled to the possession of the property in controversy at the commencement of the suit and that its value was $6.50. Therefore they obeyed the statute. But the argument for respondent is that the words “or defendants’ interest” in the instruction on damages, might have induced the jury to believe they could find a verdict for defendants, not because the latter were entitled to the property when the suit was commenced, but because they had some kind of an equitable lien on it on account of respondent’s previous purchases from them and other second-hand dealers. Even if this is conceded to be good reasoning, nevertheless the verdict was for the right party because respondent totally failed to identify the property in controversy as its own; for the evidence is that respondent’s officers did not know anything about where appellants got these bottles and that there was no difference between them and thousands of others used for bottling seltzer; some
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with a direction to the court to set aside the order granting a neAV trial and enter judgment in accordance with the verdict.