Findlay v. Knickerbocker Ice Co.

104 Wis. 375 | Wis. | 1899

Dodge, J.

1. The regularity of the amendment of the complaint cannot be doubted. An oral decision amending the complaint, made by the court on the 9th or 10th of J an-uary, was entirely sufficient for that purpose (Baker v. Baker, 51 Wis. 538); and we cannot disregard the court’s declaration of what that decision was, reduced to writing and signed ten days later nunc pro time; certainly not, upon the conflicting recollection of counsel.

• 2. Counsel for appellant urges as error the fact that the court submitted to the jury the question of the value of the property at the date of the seizure by defendant, viz. June 6, instead of at the time of commencing suit, June 13, 1898, or at the time of the trial, January 19,1899. The taking by the defendant was unquestionably tortious, and constituted a conversion, if plaintiffs had chosen so to treat it. That being so, the rule of damages is too well and deliberately settled by this court in Ingram v. Rankin, 47 Wis. 406, to require or admit discussion. The plaintiff is entitled to recover, when he cannot obtain his property, its value at the time of its takvng, and interest therefrom, with damages for *379detention, which need not here be mentioned. Under what circumstances it may be proper to submit the question of the value of the property at the time of the trial, if it be then ■im esse and capable of delivery in substantially its original condition, is a question not here presented; for the property in question was, for all practical purposes, nonexistent at the time of trial. It is obvious at once that the forty-ton residuum left by the' melting away of the original 1,800 tons was no longer ice in merchantable form. It had, of course, lost its shape and identity as merchandise, and become a conglomerate mass, merely an incumbrance of the space it occupied, not worth the cost of removal. Delivery of the property claimed, or any part thereof, in substantially its original condition, could not be had.

While, perhaps, sufficiently disposed of for the purposes of this case by the views already expressed, we cannot forbear correction of a construction which appellant’s counsel places upon the opinion in Ingram v. Rankin to support the •rule that upon the plaintiff must fall any depreciation which the property may suffer in defendant’s possession, if not due’ to the latter’s neglect or fault. Such doctrine, though not without some apparent support elsewhere, receives none from the decisions of this court. On the contrary, the true rule, where the plaintiff recovers either possession or value fixed as of a date later than a tortious taking, is that he shall recover in addition, as damages, any depreciation in the value of the property which has taken place pending the detention from any cause. Ingram v. Rankin, 47 Wis. 415; Wadleigh v. Buchingham, 80 Wis. 230, 239; Cobbey, Replevin, § 867; Carrel v. Early, 4 Bibb, 270. That rule is eminently just, in that it relieves the innocent owner from the risks of depreciation or destruction, against which he is prevented from guarding by the wrongful detention by another, and requires such risks to be borne by him who illegally withholds the property. The peril should rest upon the guilty, rather than the innocent.

*380The fact already stated, that it conclusively appeared that, the property in controversy was not in esse at the time of trial, sufficiently disposes of certain .detail criticisms of the verdict, in that the property is not sufficiently described to-enable the sheriff to accept delivery, and that the value per ton is not ascertained, so as to enable delivery of a part in diminution of the recovery. Since no delivery is possible, such defects, if defects they be, are immaterial, and not prejudicial.

3. Appellant urges that there was no evidence, to support a finding of $1,275 as the value of the ice. A careful examination of theo evidence convinces us, however, that such evidence, not incredible, did exist, although it may well be that the weight of evidence preponderated in favor of a less, sum. The appellant’s own witness, Colby, testifies to a depth of the ice of from eléven to thirteen feet, and Aberly and Nummerdor both testify to a thickness exceeding fifteen feet. A horizontal area of about 5,000 square feet, which would result in one hundred tons of ice to each vertical foot,, is established without much conflict; and, while the evidence as to value preponderates in favor of $1 per ton, there is evidence tending to establish ,$1.40. "We therefore cannot say that there was not evidence to support the verdict on this question, although other witnesses, with perhaps better opportunity of knowledge, made lower estimates.

4. Appellant insists that there was no evidence to justify a submission of the question or to support a finding of puni-tory damages. The uncontradicted evidence, we think, fully establishes a state of doubt in the minds of the defendant’s officers as to the ownership of this ice,— as fc> whether it was transferred to the defendant by a somewhat, general bill of sale, or whether it was property belonging: to the former owners from whom defendant had purchased the ice-house, and to whom it might have owed some duty of reasonably careful custody. In this state of doubt it was certainly justifiable to demand of an entire stranger seeking *381to remove tbis ice from their premises some evidence of his right thereto, and the conduct of the plaintiff, upon that request being made, in refusing to furnish any such evidence, although he might easily have done so, well tended to- increase their hesitancy in surrendering to him. . It also appears, without controversy, that all prohibitions against plaintiff’s removal of the ice were accompanied by an offer to accept exhibition of his lease, if such he had. There is absolutely no evidence of any wrong motive, malice, or wantonness in the withholding of this property, under those circumstances, and the jury should not have been allowed to enter that almost limitless field of speculation as to motives, and punishment therefor, involved in the allowance of punitory damages. We think the submission of that question, as also the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict thereon, was error. That error, however, affects no other part of the-recovery; and, while the judgment must be reversed therefor, it should be upon the condition that, if plaintiff chooses to remit the exemplary damages, the rest may stand.

By the Oourt.— Judgment reversed, and action remanded for a new trial, with the option to the plaintiff to remit the amount of exemplary damages within thirty days after the record is remitted, in which case judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff for the rest of the recovery awarded by the verdict.

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