65 Mo. 511 | Mo. | 1877
This suit originated in a justice’s court, and the statement was that, on a day named, at Brockenridge, in the county of Caldwell, defendant wrongfully took and converted to his own use a cow of plaintiff", of the value of thirty dollars. The details of the testimony are not stated, nor is it necessary that they should be, but the bill of exceptions states that there was evidence tending to prove that the cow in controversy was the property of the plaintiff" and was of the value stated in the petition, and that said cow was placed in a stock lot in Breckenridge by defendant, with a lot of cattle that he had placed there to await shipment, and that all the 'cattle in said lot Were driven to the railroad pens and shipped to Chicago, on or about the day charged in the petition; that said cow was seen in said stock pens first mentioned at various
The burthen of proof to make out his case was undoubtedly on the plaintiff, but if the plaintiff proved, to the satisfaction of the jury, that the cow was in defendant’s stock pens, and was put there by defendant or his servants, the plaintiff had made out a prima fade case of trover and conversion. It was sufficient to require the defendant then to show, either that plaintiff had put the cow in his pens, or that the cow was not there, or that, if there, she was turned out on the common or returned to plaintiff. Conversion may be inferred from the taking of the property and the neglect to return it, and trover may be maintained for taking goods, whenever trespass will lie. The trespass is in itself a conversion of the property sufficient to maintain the action. Matheny v. Johnson, 9 Mo. 230; Stickney v. Smith, 5 Min. 490; Rogers v. Maw, 15 M. & W. 448; Hilliard on Torts, 96. One who takes possession of goods unlawfully, which are in consequence lost to the owner, is to a certain extent guilty of a conversion. Heald v. Carey, 11 Com. B. 993. Now the plaintiff in this case was required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence : 1st, that the defendant did take the plaintiff’s cow; 2nd, that he shipped her; and 3rd, that he converted her to his own use. There was no allegation in the complaint of any shipment, but merely of a conversion, and the proof of a tortious taking implied a conversion, unless explained by
Reversed.