14 S.E. 745 | N.C. | 1892
At Fall Term, 1886, the jury responded in the affirmative to two issues involving the plaintiff's title and right to possession, but did not answer the other issues. Thereupon the court ordered the engine and sawmill to be sold, which was done by the commissioners appointed, and the proceeds of sale were paid and sale confirmed. (221) *154
The appeal from that judgment was not perfected.
Subsequently a judgment was rendered for what purported to be, but had never been ascertained by a jury to be, the balance of a debt due the plaintiff from the defendants, against the defendants and the sureties on the replevy bond. That judgment was reviewed on appeal (see case,
First Exception. — At May Term, 1891, when the case was called, the plaintiffs submitted the following issues:
1. What damage has the plaintiff sustained by reason of the detention of the property in controversy by the defendants from 28 November, 1884, to 12 February, 1887?
2. What damage has the plaintiff sustained by reason of the deterioration of the property in controversy from 28 November, 1884, to 12 February, 1887?
The defendants excepted to the issues tendered by the plaintiff, and contended that no issue should be submitted for the plaintiff, he having elected to stand by the judgments of Fall Term, 1886, and February Term, 1887, and reap the fruits of the same. Also, upon the grounds that if any issues were submitted, they should be those submitted at Fall Term, 1886, and not passed upon by the jury, with the following additional issue tendered by the defendants and accepted by the plaintiff: "What damage has the defendant sustained by reason of the tearing down of the house and removing the machinery of the plaintiff?"
The defendants further objected to the issues as tendered by the plaintiff, upon the ground that the time during which damages should be assessed against defendants should be from 28 November, 1884, to October Term, 1886. The issues tendered by the plaintiff and the one tendered by the defendants were submitted by the court, and the (222) defendants excepted.
After the close of the evidence, and during the argument of counsel, his Honor, of his own motion, changed the issues and submitted to the jury those set out in the record, and the defendant did not except.
Second Exception. — The plaintiff was examined as a witness in his own behalf, and testified that the mill and engine had deteriorated in value from 28 November, 1884, to 12 February, 1887, a certain sum, and that the mill during that period would have been fairly worth to him the sum of $50 to $60 per month.
The defendants excepted to the evidence as to the monthly value, upon the ground that the witness should testify as to the value of the mill during the period as a whole, and that the interest upon the value at the time of seizure was the true measure of damages. *155
There was evidence on the part of the defendants tending to show that at the time of the seizure the property was under repair and had no rental value; that repairs were put upon it by the defendants to an amount of $125.
Third Exception. — On the cross-examination of the plaintiff he testified, the defendants objecting, that while the property was in possession of the defendants and before this action was instituted, he had been paid by the defendants the sum of $200 on an alleged contract of sale of the property. During the progress of the trial his Honor withdrew this evidence from the jury, and the defendants excepted.
Fourth Exception. — His Honor charged the jury that the interest on the value of the property at the time of the seizure was not the measure of damages for the detention, but that the true measure of damages was the fair rental value during the period, at the place of location, and that the jury might estimate it by the month, as all the evidence introduced tending to show a value tended to show it (223) by the month. The defendant excepted.
Fifth Exception. — The court further charged the jury that in estimating the deterioration of the property the jury might consider the price at which the property sold at the commissioner's sale, together with the other evidence in the case, to which charge the defendants excepted. There was a verdict as set out in the record. The defendants moved for a new trial, for the errors assigned. The motion was refused and judgment rendered as set out in the record.
Sixth Exception. — From which judgment the defendants appealed to the Supreme Court, for the errors assigned, and for the further reason that no judgment should be rendered against defendants' sureties for costs. Under the provisions of the original section (326 of The Code) the bond filed by the defendants in the ancillary proceeding would have been conditioned for the delivery to the plaintiff of the property described in his affidavit, "if such delivery should be adjudged, and for the payment ofsuch sum as may for any cause be recovered against the defendant." But it was provided by the act amendatory of that section (ch. 50, sec. 2, Laws 1885) that such bond should thereafter be conditioned "for the delivery thereof with damages for its deterioration and its detention, if deliverycan be had; and if such delivery cannot, for any cause, be had, for thepayment to him of such sum as may be recovered against the defendant for the *156 value of the property at the time of the unlawful taking or detention, withinterest thereon, as damages for such taking and detention."
In Taylor v. Hodges,
In providing that the plaintiff shall have interest from the time of the taking or detention, in lieu of damage, the statute but reaffirms a principle upon which the court might have acted under similar circumstances before its passage. Holmes v. Godwin and Miller v. Hahn,supra. Where the property could not be returned, and the court was bound to take cognizance of the fact, as in the case at bar, it was error to instruct the jury that a fair rental value of the property was the true measure of damage instead of the interest from the time of wrongful detention, as it was to submit the issue offered by the plaintiff involving the question of damages by deterioration and detention. The court could have proceeded to judgment as to the amount due plaintiff for the detention upon a finding of the value of property when the defendants wrongfully detained it, because the law prescribes that interest on said sum from that time shall be the damage. (226) But in a case like that at bar, where a purchaser makes default in paying the purchase money for personal property, the title to which is still in the original owner, either by reconveyance or reservation at the time of the sale, the jury should ascertain the value when the purchaser acquired possession, because his refusal to meet the payments and perform the conditions attaching to the purchase place him, in contemplation of law, in the same position as if the original taking had been wrongful instead of permissive. If the court had directed the jury to find the value of the mill and engine when delivered to the defendants, the court could have proceeded to judgment upon that finding by allowing interest on that sum, as damage, unless it appeared also that there was a stipulated price agreed upon between the parties for the property, a part of which had been actually paid. Claiming the right to show such contract and payment, the defendants excepted to the ruling of the court in withdrawing from the jury evidence that had been admitted and which tended to show that the defendants had previously paid to the plaintiff $200, a part of the purchase price of the machinery seized, while it was still in the hands of the defendants as purchasers, and before the seizure and subsequent replevying by defendants. *158
The defendants set up the defense in their answer that they had bought the portable sawmill and engine from the plaintiff, had agreed to pay him $800, and had actually paid, after the original contract of sale, and before the seizure, $200. It seems that the defendants on the former appeal insisted that the court could not proceed to judgment upon the simple finding that the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession of the mill and engine in controversy, when it appeared of record that they had been converted into money by virtue of an order in the cause. When Justice Davis said for the Court that there was "at least one" issue remaining to be tried, he evidently adverted (227) to the possibility that the defendants might insist, on the new trial awarded, upon their claim to a credit upon the value of the machinery for the payment of $200. Where in selling property the owner reserves title in himself till the purchase money is paid, or takes a reconveyance by mortgage deed to himself from the purchaser to secure his debt, though he has a right to demand possession on default in the payment of the price or on breach of the conditions of the mortgage, the defendant and his sureties upon a final adjustment of their liabilities may justly demand that the jury shall find what was the price agreed upon between the parties for the property, and what sum had been actually paid. Taylor v. Hodges, supra. "There are torts and contracts, just as there used to be; but there are not several forms of action. . . . It is the transaction that is investigated, without regard to its form or name." Walsh v. Hall,
Under the old practice the plaintiff might have brought an action of detinue or trover and conversion, or he might have sued out a writ of replevin and seized the machinery, but in either action he would have recovered costs, and in the action of replevin the sureties on the defendants' replevin bond would have been liable for costs as incident to the judgment for the property. Under the new practice it was held, up to the passage of the act of 1885, that if the plaintiff, instead of declaring in his complaint for a tortious taking or a wrongful conversion, simply resorted to the ancillary proceeding of claim and delivery, the action would be assimilated to that of replevin, in so far that the value should be estimated as of the time of trial. Holmes v.Godwin, supra. But we see no reason why the analogy does not hold out so far as to entitle the plaintiff to costs as incident to recovery of the property withheld. But our attention is called to the form of the amended statute as bearing directly on this question. It is true that the language of section 326 of The Code is unmistakable (229) in requiring the bond to be conditioned "for the payment of such sum as may for any cause be recovered against the defendant." We do not think that it was the intention of the Legislature to alter the law in this respect. Besides, this is not like an affidavit for injunction, only an incidental, though an ancillary proceeding, because the matter in controversy is the same as that covered by the condition of the bond, viz., Which of the parties had the right to the specific property? The plaintiff will be entitled to receive, before the bond can be discharged, if he should prevail in the action, not only the value of the property or the balance of the purchase money, as the case may be, with interest, but the costs as incident to his recovery. Slaughter v. Winfrey,
Error.
Cited: Taylor v. Taylor,
(230)