57 P. 617 | Ariz. | 1899
In the court below, Charles L. Hall brought suit in claim and delivery against the Southern Pacific Company to recover the possession of thirty-one and one half tons of street-railway iron. The complaint alleged that Hall was the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of the railway iron, and that the same was wrongfully detained by the Southern Pacific Company from the plaintiff, Hall; that the actual value of the same was four hundred and fifty-five dollars; and that the said property had not been seized under any process, execution, or judgment against the property of Hall. The complaint further alleged that the railroad company claimed a lien on the property for freight, amounting to $285.52, and that the said freight charges had accrued without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff; that, notwithstanding he was in no way responsible for said freight charges, and although the same were not a lien on the property, plaintiff, before the commencement of the suit, tendered said sum to said company in payment of said charges, and demanded possession of the rails; that the company refused to receive said money or deliver possession of said property. The defendant company answered the complaint, denying plaintiff’s ownership of the property described in the complaint, and
The appellant makes the following assignments of error: “First. The court erred in deciding that Hall was not entitled to the possession of the property, the pleadings admitting that he was. Second. The court erred in deciding that Hall was not entitled to the possession of the property, he having an existing lien thereon for the transportation charges he had advanced. Third. The court erred in adjudging that the title in and to said property was in the two Goodwins, title in them not having been plead. Fourth. The court erred in deciding that the title to the property was in the two Goodwins, they being, by the facts shown in the case, estopped from denying that the title to the property was in their brother James. Fifth. The court erred in giving judgment against Hall and his sureties and in favor of the company for the value of said property, the company not being its owner, and having no interest in it. Sixth. The court erred in adjudging that the ownership of the property is in the two Goodwins, their interest therein, whatever it was, having
1. The answer denied the allegation in the complaint that Hall was the owner, but did not deny the allegation that he was entitled to the immediate possession, of the railroad iron. While the answer was defective in this respect, the appellant, however, made no attempt, before or at the trial, to take advantage of the defect, but, on the contrary, tried the case as though the answer put in issue his right to the possession of the rails. We think, under these circumstances, the defect in the answer was cured by the judgment. Bliss on Code Pleading, sec. 442; Gale v. Water Co., 14 Cal. 26.
2. The record discloses that Hall, at the time of the institution of the suit,- gave bond, and replevied the.property from the railroad company, and at the time paid the freight charges due the latter. He contends that, as a lien for freight is transferable, his payment of the freight charges to the railroad- company gave him a right to retain the property until those charges were refunded to him, and that the judgment is erroneous, because it does not recognize this right. The judgment is in the alternative for the return of the property or the recovery of its value, placed at four hundred and sixty dollars. It was admitted by Hall that he had, before trial, sold the iron. That part of the judgment, therefore, which provided for the return of the property to the company without any provision for the repayment of the freight charges, could not prejudice Hall. Having parted with the property, the money judgment alone was enforceable against’ him. The latter part of the judgment, providing for the alternative money judgment, fixed the value of the iron at four hundred and sixty dollars. Upon the trial it was stipulated that the actual value of the property was four hundred and sixty dollars, plus $285.52, the amount of the
3. The court found that Hall was not the owner and was not entitled to the possession of-the railroad iron, and found that the appellee was entitled to the possession of the property. These findings were in themselves sufficient to support the judgment. It is of no importance, therefore, so far as appellant is concerned, if the additional finding that the title to the property was in T. J. and R. G. Goodwin be, as claimed by appellant, unwarranted by the pleadings. As both the title and right of possession were found not to be in Hall, his taking and detention of the same from appellee, who was at the time of the taking in the actual possession of the same, became tortious and wrongful. The plaintiff in replevin must recover upon the strength of his own title or right of possession, and, in case he fails to establish his title or right of possession, the defendant is entitled to be restored to his possession. Stanley v. Neale, 98 Mass. 343.
4. To maintain his title to the railroad iron, appellant at the trial put in evidence a transcript from the judgment-docket of the district court of Maricopa County which showed that a judgment had been obtained by appellant, Hall, against James C. Goodwin in the sum of $1,723.94, with interest at eighteen per cent per annum from January 8, 1897, until paid, and $255.64 attorney’s fees and costs. The time of the entry of this record of judgment was January 8, 1897. The transcript showed that on March 22, 1897, there was a balance due on said judgment of $920.03. Appellant further put in evidence an execution issued out of said court under said judgment against the property of said J. C. Goodwin, and the return of the sheriff, L. H. Orme, showing that he had on the twenty-third day .of March, 1897, “levied upon all the right, title, claim, and interest of James C. Goodwin, the defendant herein named, in, of, and to that certain franchise granted by the board of supervisors of Maricopa County, Arizona Territory, on the fifth day of December, 1892, . . . and all of said defendant’s right, title, claim, and interest in, of, and to the cars, rails, and railway, and to all things appertaining to, or used on or in connection with, the Tempe Street Railway, as said defendant’s right, title, claim, and inter
5. The relation which the Southern Pacific Company bore to T. J. and R. G. Goodwin with regard to the railroad iron was that of a bailee. As against one who neither had the title nor the right to the possession, a bailee may maintain replevin for the possession of the property which is the subject of the bailment, and may recover its full value from such stranger who may have unlawfully converted it, holding the amount so recovered in excess of his own interest in trust for his bailor. Between the general owner of the property and the bailee, or one having a special interest in the property, a recovery by the latter, in case a return of the property cannot be had, must be limited to the value of the special interest possessed by the latter. The ease of Levy v. Leatherwood, 5 Ariz. 244, 52 Pac. 359, relied upon by appellant in support of his fifth assignment of error, was a case between one who held the legal title to, and who, as against every one except the creditors of his grantor, was a general owner of, the property sought to be replevied, and a sheriff who held the property under writs of attachment, and who therefore had but a special interest in the same, limited to the amount repre
6. We find nothing in the record to sustain appellant’s sixth assignment of error; on the contrary, the evidence shows that the title to the railroad iron had not been transferred, at the time of the suit, from the Goodwins to the Tucson Street-Railway Company.
7. The appellee, in its answer, claimed a return of the property, and hence, under paragraph 202 of the Revised Statutes, the court properly assessed the value of the property taken, and gave its alternative judgment for the recovery of the same. The court, however, did not, as assumed by appellant in his seventh assignment, award damages against appellant for the taking and detaining of the property. A judgment for the value of the property taken is not a judgment for damages as that term is used in paragraph 202, which provides that “the court- or jury must assess the value of the property taken, and the damages for taking and detaining the same,” etc.
8. The contention made by appellant in his eighth and last assignment has already been disposed of by us in considering the question raised by appellant’s second assignment of error.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Street, C. J., and Doan, J., concur.