175 P. 253 | Okla. | 1918
On the 12th day of October, 1914, J.F. Ward, a resident of Lincoln county, Okla., purchased of James F. Muse a resident of Collingsworth county, Tex., 100 head of three and four year old steers, the purchase, price being $5,200, $500 in cash and a note for $4,700 payable February 1, 1915.
At the time of the sale the cattle were located in Texas, but were afterwards by agreement of the parties moved to Lincoln county, Okla., by Ward, where they were kept and fattened. Muse afterwards sold and transferred the Ward note to the City National Bank of Wellington, together with the chattel mortgage on the cattle given by Ward to secure the payment of the note. The cattle having been prepared for the market, Ward, on January 10, 1915, shipped them to the Stribbling Commission Company, a live stock commission company at Oklahoma City, who afterwards sold them to A.A. Woodrow. Ward's shipment included a carload of hogs. After deducting commissions, feed bill, and yardage, the Stribbling Commission Company paid for the cattle by checks payable to the order of Ward one in the sum of $20, the second for $7,053.32; the latter check was received by the McLoud National Bank, and the sum evidenced thereby placed to his credit. On January 14th, Ward sent to the Wellington bank his check on the McLoud bank for $4.,500 payable to the order of Muse, which check, on the 18th day of January following, was returned to Ward by the Wellington bank accompanied by a letter stating that the bank did not accept personal checks in payment of notes, and requested Ward to send exchange payable to the bank's order for the full amount of the note with accrued interest. This Ward failed to do, and after some futile correspondence on the part of the Wellington bank, on or about the 1st of February following, the bank sent its attorney to McLoud for the purpose of collecting the note. The attorney's efforts in this respect proved unavailing, and on the 10th day of March the bank instituted an action to recover its indebtdeness naming as defendants J.B. Stribbling. J.B. Stribbling Commission Company, A.A. Woodrow. Sulzberger Sons, C.M. Keys Commission Company, and the first National Bank of McLoud.
The petition filed charged the several defendants therein with having conspired with Ward to cheat and defraud plaintiff bank by causing the mortgaged cattle to be transferred to Oklahoma City and there sold and delivered without plaintiff's consent and to its great detriment and damage; that the defendants each and all knew that the cattle in question were mortgaged and that plaintiff was the owner and holder of the note and mortgage; that, in disregard of plaintiff's rights, by their wrongful and unlawful action and the conspiracy charged defendants *54 had prevented and precluded plaintiff from taking possession of and exercising its lawful dominion over the cattle. Issues being joined, the case went to trial, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff's evidence plaintiff dismissed its action without prejudice as to the defendants Sulzberger Sons and C.M. Keys Commission Company, and at the same time asked permission to file an amendment to the petition for the purpose, as stated by counsel, of "making the allegations conform to the proof." The amendment charged that it was offered "in addition to the allegations and averments contained the original petition and the first amendment thereto." The first amendment referred to in no wise changed plaintiff's original cause of action, except to increase the amount of recovery sought by reason of additional costs and expenses incurred in an effort to enforce the collection of the note. On objection of counsel for the McLoud bank, the court refused to permit the amendement to be made, to which the plaintiff excepted. This action of the court is under review in the proceedings in error in No. 8184. At the conclusion of all of the evidence, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the Wellington bank and against the McLoud bank for $6,444.50, and found in favor of the other defendants.
The principal error relied upon by the McLoud bank is in overruling its demurrer to the plaintiff's evidence. The theory upon which plaintiff sought a recovery in the lower court, and which it urges in this court, is that there was abundant evidence to sustain its charge of a conspiracy, especially its charge of a conspiracy between the McLoud bank and Ward. As circumstances tending to establish a conspiracy it is pointed out that, prior to Ward's purchase of the cattle from Muse, the McLoud bank had in answer to a confidential inquiry from the Wellington bank, under date of October 13, 1914, written the Wellington bank a letter recommending Ward as a man enjoying a good reputation, worthy of confidence, and an experienced cattleman, while in fact Ward was at the time indebted to the bank for borrowed money; and the further fact that on February 8, 1915, Ward absconded.
Under the common-law writ of conspiracy, which was applicable only to a conspiracy to have a person indicted for treason or a capital felony, a judgment could not be entered against one or two defendants if a verdict was found in favor of the other. Saville v. Roberts, 1 Ld. Raym. 379. That writ, which is now obsolete, has been superseded by an action on the case in the nature of a conspiracy. As the gist of the modern action is the damage done to the plaintiff, the authorities sustain the proposition that, where damages is shown for which one of the defendants may be liable, a verdict may be rendered against him even though no conspiracy is proved. In other words, it is not simply for conspiring to do the unlawful act that the action lies, but for doing the act and that affords the ground of the action. "A simple conspiracy," says Nelson, Chief Justice, in Hutchins v. Hutchins, 7 Hill (N.Y.) 107, "however atrocious, unless it resulted in actual damage to the party, never was the subject of a civil action; not even when the old form of a writ of conspiracy, in its limited and most technical character, was in use." The authorities generally support the view that it is the damage sustained, and not the conspiracy, that forms the gist of the action. 5 R. C. L. 1091; Kimball v. Harman et al.,
A "conversion" is defined in Aylesbury Merc. Co. v. Fitch,
In the separate appeal prosecuted by the City National Bank of Wellington against the J.B. Stribbling Commission Company. J.B. Stribbling, and A.A. Woodrow, though numerous errors are assigned in the petition in error, the only point urged is that the trial court erred in not permitting the amendment to be made. Plaintiff states that its proposed amendment was offered "out of an abundance of caution." and not because the original petition was defective, or that their was a variance between the allegation of the original petition and the proof, "but because of plaintiff's statutory, right to embody in its pleadings any cause of action it might have against the defendants which arose out of the same transaction." The amendment we have seen was offered, not in lieu of the original petition, but in addition thereto and in connection therewith. It charged the giving of the original letter of recommendation by the McLoud bank, the sale of the cattle by Muse to Ward, the due recordation of the mortgage in Lincoln county knowledge of the transaction between Muse and Ward by the McLoud bank, and alleged that because of the relationship of the parties it became the duty of the bank to safely keep the fund for the use and benefit of plaintiff in error; that having permitted the money to be checked out of the bank by Ward, and having failed to discharge its duty in the premises, it became and was liable to plaintiff for the money received by it, the proceeds of the sale.
The matter of permitting amendments during the course of a trial rests largely *56
in the discretion of the trial court. Section 4738, Rev. Laws 1910, authorizes a plaintiff to unite several causes of action in the same petition, whether they be such as have heretofore been denominated legal or equitable, or both, where they all arise out of any one of the following classes: (1) The same transaction, or transactions, connected with the same subject of action. (2) Contracts express or implied. (3) Injuries, with or without force, to person and property, or either. (4) Injuries to character. (5) Claims to recover the possession of personal property with or without damages for the withholding thereof. (6) Claims to recover real property, 'with or without damages for the withholding thereof, and the rents and profits of the same. (7) Claims against a trustee by virtue of a contract, or by operation of law. The statute further provides that the causes of action so united must all belong to one of the classes named, and must affect all the parties to the action, except in actions to enforce mortgages or other liens. The amendment states no cause of action or invokes no relief against the defendants other than the McLoud bank. It is not necessary to determine whether the causes of action as set up in the original petition and contained in the trial amendment belonged to the same class, as it is clear they do not affect all the parties to the action. This requirement was observed by the court in Aylesbury Merc. Co. v. Fitch,
The original petition charged and the theory upon which the case was tried was, that as a result of a conspiracy entered into between the several defendants the cattle on which the Wellington bank had a mortgage were sold by defendants in disregard of the legal rights of the owner of the mortgage and that the wrongful acts complained of constituted a conversion of the property mortgaged. A joint judgment was asked against all the defendants, not only for the value of the cattle, but for the additional sum of $1,255 costs and expenses incurred. This charge of a joint wrong by the several defendants the amendment laid out of the case. It sought to bring into the action the issue that the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged cattle constituted a trust fund in the bank's possession for which it was chargeable in equity. In this the defendants Stribbling, the Stribbling Commission Company, and Woodrow were in no wise interested. There was no common or joint liability such as would authorize the joinder of the different causes of action, because, as we have seen, the amendment proposed affected only the liability of the defendant bank. The case of Benson v. Battey, supra, is particularly in point. There it was observed that one of the causes of action attempted to be united was in equity for an accounting, and the other an action at law for damages. In one, two defendants were treated as trustees, and, in the other, the third defendant was treated as a tort-feasor. In one the recovery sought was that each defendant account for so much of the trust as he obtained and held in violation of the trust, while the other was for the full amount of the damages inflicted by the wrongdoing of a defendant, without regard to whether he received or held any of the trust fund. It was said that, in the equitable accounting, the determination would be by the court without a jury; and, in the action for damages, the third defendant would be entitled to a jury trial as a matter of right. That even though the causes of action united in the petition were not in their nature incongruous, the fact that each did not affect all of the defendants would render the petition demurrable for misjoinder of causes of action.
If the causes of action could not originally have been united in the same petition, because of the provision requiring that all the parties be affected, it cannot be said that the trial court erred in refusing to permit plaintiff, at the conclusion of its testimony, to amend its petition, and thus during the trial do what it could not originally have done. Had the plaintiff at the time of offering its amendment dismissed its action as to the other defendants, a different situation *57 would probably be presented; but this was not done, and it is here insisted that the judgment against the McLoud bank should be sustained upon the proofs offered in support of its original petition. True, the plaintiff also would probably be presented; but this was not done, and it is here insisted that the judgment against the McLoud bank should be sustained upon the proofs offered in support of its original petition asks that the amendment be treated as allowed as made over defendant's objection, stating that no possible harm can result therefrom. Having confessedly tried the case upon the conversion theory, counsel's request must be denied. To allow it would be to deprive the McLoud bank of meeting an issue not before the trial court and which could not properly have been put in issue so long as the original petition charging a joint liability was relied upon as a basis of recovery by the plaintiff bank. By the bringing in of the amendment during the trial plaintiff could not have an action against one of the defendants to impress a trust on funds coming into its possession, and at the same time prosecute its action against such defendant and others on the ground of an original conversion of the mortgaged cattle. The claim that the court should consider the amendment as having been made cannot be considered for another and controlling reason: The McLoud bank is not a party to the appeal prosecuted by the Wellington bank.
In the motion for a new trial filed by the Wellington bank, it was only asked that the judgment be vacated and set aside as to the verdict in favor of the defendants J.B. Stribbling and A.A. Woodrow. In the petition in error filed in this court, it is only sought to reverse the judgment of the lower court in favor of the defendants J.B. Stribbling, J.B. Stribbling Commission Company, and A.A. Woodrow; the McLoud bank being neither named nor made a party. The appeal prosecuted by the Wellington bank is not on cross-petition in error, but by independent proceedings to review, separately docketed and numbered. The appeal prosecuted by the McLoud bank from the judgment rendered against it is wholly disconnected with the appeal of the Wellington bank. The respective motions for new trial were overruled on November 13, 1915, and the order consolidating the two cases was made in this court on August 6, 1916. No appearance has at any time been entered in this court in No. 8184 on the part of the McLoud bank. In such circumstances, the action of the trial court in refusing to permit the trial amendment to be made will not, for fundamental reasons be reversed. From what has been said we conclude that the lower court did not err in refusing the trial amendment, and that there is no such error presented to this court as requires a reversal of the judgment against the Wellington bank.
All the Justices concur, except MILEY, J., absent and not participating.