113 A. 449 | Conn. | 1921
The issues raised by counts one, two and four were found in favor of the plaintiff, and form the subject of this appeal. The equitable issues under count three were found in favor of defendant. Counts one and two are for the conversion of two separate nonnegotiable promissory notes, and these counts are alike in terms, and count four is for the conversion of certain rents. The counts for the conversion of the notes allege: (1) the execution and delivery of the notes at named dates to Frank Flammia, then in life, which were secured by mortgage; (2) the unlawful obtaining of the notes by the defendant, who is now in unlawful possession of them; (3) the death of Frank Flammia and the appointment and qualification of the plaintiff as administrator of his estate; and (4) the demand by the plaintiff from the defendant of said notes and the refusal to deliver the same, and the conversion of them by the defendant.
The answers admit the execution and delivery of these notes to Frank Flammia, and that they are now in the possession of the defendant, but deny the demand, the refusal, and the conversion. And they further allege that the notes were executed and delivered to Frank Flammia, not to be his individual property, but as that of the copartnership composed of the defendant and Frank Flammia, in business under the name of *235 Frank Flammia Company, and that Frank Flammia in his lifetime gave and delivered these notes to the defendant in part payment of his share of the partnership. And, further, that the defendant owns and possesses the notes as surviving partner of the partnership. The replies join issue upon these affirmative allegations of the answers.
The trial court held that since the answers admit that the notes were executed and delivered to the plaintiff's intestate, and that they are now in the defendant's possession, the only allegation of fact in these two counts which the plaintiff was bound to prove was that of the demand and refusal, as contained in paragraph five of the complaint.
This was an erroneous interpretation of these counts and an erroneous conception of the requirements of the cause of action attempted to be set forth in them. That cause of action was conversion. Conversion arises when there has been an "unlawful exercise of dominion over goods or chattels belonging to another who is entitled their immediate possession." Metropolis Mfg. Co. v.Lynch,
There can be no presumption of a right to the immediate possession of these notes after the notes came into the possession of the defendant. They may have passed out of the hands of the plaintiff's interstate and come into the hands of the defendant lawfully. Ownership, or facts drawing with them the right to the immediate possession of these notes, should have been alleged; without these it does not appear that the defendant did unlawfully refuse to deliver these notes. To require this allegation is no hardship upon a plaintiff in conversion. The plaintiff fully understood the need of this allegation when he alleged that the defendant obtained the unlawful possession of these notes. Without this allegation, these counts were demurrable. The authorities are agreed upon the necessity, in a complaint in trover, of alleging a right to the immediate possession of the thing alleged to have been converted. And our attention has not been directed to any authority holding that an allegation of delivery carries with it the right of immediate possession after the thing alleged to have been converted has passed into the possession of another. 1 Swift's Digest, *533; Thayer v. Kitchen,
The cause of action described in count four, for the conversion of rents collected by the defendant from property of the plaintiff's intestate, depends upon the finding that the plaintiff's intestate was in his lifetime possessed of the property from which the defendant has collected the rents and converted them to his own use. As we read the evidence, there was no evidence from which such ownership could be found; on the contrary, it appeared that at the time of death of the plaintiff's intestate he and the defendant owned said premises jointly as partners under the name of Frank Flammia Company. The motion to correct paragraph eighteen of the finding, as requested, and to add to the finding paragraphs eleven, sixteen, seventeen and twenty-three of the draft-finding, should have been granted. The refusal so to rule was error.
The trial court ruled that "the true value of the notes converted by the defendant is prima facie their face value in the absence of any evidence on the part of the defendant in mitigation of damages," and rendered judgment for the face of these notes, with interest. The defendant insists that this was error, since no evidence was introduced to show the value of the notes, or that plaintiff had in fact suffered any damage.
We think the court was correct in the measure of damages it applied. The measure of damages in conversion or trover is, "in general, the value of the property at the time of the conversion, with interest." Seymour
v. Ives,
In an action for the conversion of a note and mortgage, we approved of an instruction "that in the absence of evidence of actual value, they [the jury] should consider the note and mortgage at its face value, and that the burden of proof was upon the defendant to show that it was worth less than its face value." Hoyt
v. Stuart,
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.