2 S.D. 310 | S.D. | 1891
This is an action for damages for the unlawful conversion of personal property. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff upon a special verdict. Defendants appeal. The plaintiff, in his complaint, alleges, in substance, that the defendant D. M. Osborne & Co. is a corporation; that on or about
The following errors are assigned: “(1) The court erred in not sustaining defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence, on the alleged ground that the complaint did not state a cause of action. (2) The court erred in sustaining the motion of plaintiff to strike out the testimony of the witness Jones, and the judgment and pleadings in the case of D. M. Osborne & Go. v. Hubert Humpfner. (3) The court erred in denying defendants’ motion to direct a verdict in favor of defendants. (4) The court erred in submitting each and all said special findings to the jury. (5) The court erred in
Appellants contend that the complaint fails to state a cause of action, it alleging that on a certain day the defendants took possession of the property, but stating no facts showing that such taking was against the will or consent of plaintiff. The complaint was evidently drawn upon the theory that the property came rightfully into the possession of the defendants, but that subsequently it was wrongfully converted by them to their own use, by a wrongful sale, making the action one that under the old common law system of pleadings would have been an action of trover, which seems to be in accord with the intention of the pleader. The action being in the nature of trover, the complaint is, we think, sufficient under the Code. It alleges ownership and possession of the property by plaintiff; that it came into possession of defendants, (the old common law fictitious statement of loss and finding being omitted;) and that while so in the possession of defendants they unlawfully converted the same to their own use. The further allegation that defendants “look possession of said personal property” was unnecessary, and should be treated as surplusage. In trespass, an allegation of possession and wrongful taking would be sufficient, but in an action for conversion, a general or special property, as well as possession or a right of possession, should be averred. The ownership and possession being alleged, the right to possession follows; and the allegation that-the property was in the possession of the defendants when converted carries with it no inference that defendants had a right to dispose of it as
2. Appellants further contend that, as the plaintiff alleged he was the owner of the property at the time of the alleged taking, which was denied by the answer, a material issue was made on the question of ownership, and this issue' was not passed upon by the jury, there being no general verdict and no finding upon this issue by the special verdict. This would undoubtedly be a fatal error if the facts were as claimed by counsel. But an examination of the answ er discloses the fact that while, perhaps, the ownership of the plaintiff was put in issue by the general denial, the defendants have admitted the ownership by plaintiff in clear and unequivocal terms in other parts of the answer. In paragraph 3 it is alleged by the defendants that the plaintiff at the time of the making of the chattel mortgage set out in the answer, was the owner of the personal property therein described, (being the same claimed by plaintiff in his complaint.) Plaintiff being then the owner, that ownership will be presumed to continue, in the absence of evidence showing a transfer of the title. 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 40, 41,* and notes; Magee v. Scott, 9 Cush. 148. This ownership, therefore, being admitted in one defense in the answer, though denied in another, left no issue of the question of ownership to be submitted to the jury. This court recently held in McLaughlin v. Alexander, (S. D.) 49 N. W. Rep. 99, that an admission in one defense of facts alleged in the complaint, though denied in another defense in the same answer, relieved the plaintiff from the necessity of proving such facts on the trial. Facts admitted in the pleadings need not be submitted to or found by the jury in a special verdict. 3 Wait, Pr. 196. The facts admitted by the pleadings, together with those found by the jury, present the whole case in proper form for the consideration of the court. Barto v. Himrod, 8 N. Y. 483. A special verdict, as contended by counsel, must find on all the material facts put in issue by the pleadings when no general verdict is returned with the special ver
3. Again, appellants insist that, as the mortgage provided that, if the mortgagee ‘ ‘shall at any time deem itself insecure, then, thereupon and thereafter, it shall be lawful for said mortgagee * * * to take said property, * * * and hold or sell or dispose of the same,” the jury should have been required to find the fact only as to whether or not D. M. Osborne & Co. did deem itself insecure, and that it was error in the court to submit questions 2 to 6, inclusive, to the jury. We cannot agree with counsel in their construction of the clause in the mortgage above stated. This clause does not. we think, confer upon the mortgagee the absolute and arbitrary power of declaring for itsélf, without sufficient cause, that it does deem itself insecure, and authorize it to proceed and take and sell the property before the debt becomes due, but that it only authorizes the mortgagee to deem itself insecure, and to take such possession and sell when the mortgagor has done or is about to do some one or more of the acts specified in the mortgage as grounds upon which the mortgagee may proceed to take such possession and sell. To hold that the right to take possession and sell before the debt becomes due depends upon the mortgagee’s election and pleasure, and not upon the facts as they actually exist,-would be clearly in conflict with other express and implied contracts contained in the note and mortgage, which are to be construed together. These clearly contemplate time for payment as specified in the note or mortgage, and possession by the mortgagor until the maturity of the debt, unless he does or is about to do some act detrimental
4. The appellants further contend that the court erred in striking out the docket entries and other proceedings had in the justice court in the case of D. M. Osborne & Co. v. Humpfner, the plaintiff in this action, given in evidence by defendants. In this contention we think the appellants are correct. These proceedings are set out in the answer as one of the defenses relied upon. The entries in the justice’s docket and record in that action are fully set out as exhibits in the abstract, and from them and the evidence admitted and not stricken out it appears that after the action now before us was commenced, and before the answer was filed, D. M. Osborne & Co. commenced an action in a justice court of Grant county against Humpfner, the plaintiff herein, to recover the sum appearing
Appellants insist that, as the judgment was rendered in the justice court in favor of Humpfner, he received the benefit of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale of the mortgaged property, and thereby ratified the foreclosure proceedings, and is
Humpfner, on the trial in the j ustice court, was called as a witness in his own behalf, and testified as follows: “I remember having a settlement on November 6, 1886, with the agent, Burnell. He wanted me to pay the two notes past due. I gave him a new note for $207, dated November 6, 1886, due November 1, 1887. They foreclosed the mortgage securing the new note of $207. I never owed D. M. Osborne & Co. any other note or account. The mortgage which was foreclosed was the mortgage securing the $207 note. The $207 note bears on the margin thereof the words “Collateral to No. 18,535 E, and No.