24 Wend. 379 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1840
By the Court,
When property has been tortiously taken, the owner is not only entitled to an action, but to full compensation in damages ; and he can neither be deprived of the one nor the other by any mere act of the wrong-doer, as by an unaccepted offer to return the property, or causing it to be subsequently taken on legal process in his oion favor against the owner. Hanmer v. Wilsey, 17 Wendell, 91. Otis v. Jones, 21 id. 394. In the last case I remarked, that had there been a salo before suit brought, on legal process against the owner in favor of some person other than the wrong-doer, that would have presented a question which we were not then called upon to decide. That question is now before us ; and I
There is, I think, a difference in principle between the *eases on [ *381 ] which the plaintiff relies, and the one at bar. One who has wrongfully taken property cannot mitigate damages by showing that Tie has himself applied the property to the owner’s use without his consent. But when the property has been so applied, by the act of a third person and the operation of law, that fact should be taken into the account in estimating the "plaintiff’s damages.
Judgment reversed.