26 Wash. 175 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by respondent to recover possession of certain personal property, consisting of pound net material, of which respondent claimed to be the owner. It is alleged that appellants wrongfully and forcibly and without respondent’s consent took possession of said property. Judgment is demanded for the recovery of the possession of the property, or for the sum of $175, the value thereof, in case its return cannot be-had, and also for $150 damages. The appellants in their answer admit that respondent was the owner of the property, but deny that they wrongfully took possession thereof. They also allege affirmatively that the appellant Martin Flink was constable of Ilwaco precinct, Pacific county, Washington, duly elected and qualified as such, and that the appellant Aberdeen Packing Company was a corporation; that on the 4th day of June, 1897, the respondent executed and delivered his promissory note to said corporation for the sum of $140, due on demand; that on the 13th day of September, 1897, respondent executed and delivered to said corporation his certain other promissory note for the sum of $225, due one day after date; that for the purpose of securing said notes, the respondent also executed two chattel mortgages to said corporation, there being one mortgage of even date with each note, and given specially
The findings of the trial court are very brief, and it is insisted by appellants that the court erred in not making such findings upon other points claimed to be within the issues as were proposed by appellants. The findings, in effect, were that appellant the Aberdeen Packing Company is a corporation, and appellant Plink is a qualified constable, as above stated; that at the time the property was taken, respondent was the owner thereof, and entitled to its possession; that its value is the aggregate sum of $175; that appellants, without respondent’s consent, wrongfully and forcibly took the property from respondent’s possession, and the same is unlawfully withheld by appellants; that appellants have disposed of the property, and its return cannot be had. The court did not find whether the chattels covered by the mortgages are the same as those claimed in the complaint, and there is no finding concerning the alleged foreclosure of the mortgages. We are therefore not advised from the record as to the precise theory upon which the case was determined. It may have been upon the theory that the chattels described in the complaint are> not the same as those included in the mortgages, or upon the theory that, even though they were the same, the manner of the attempted
“Other reasons might be assigned why constables are not proper officers to be entrusted with this power, but, without enumerating them, we conclude that the legislature meant to confine its execution to the sheriff (and*180 his deputies) when that officer is qualified to act, and to the officers provided by law to' act in the place of the sheriff when that officer is disqualified.”
Upon the authority of the above case it must therefore be held here that appellant Flink took possession of the chattels without authority, and that the taking was wrongful and unlawful. Since the taking was wrongful, and the property has since been disposed of, there was a conversion of the same. Appellants, however, further contend that under their affirmative defense they are entitled to set off against the amount found as the value of the property the amount of respondent’s indebtedness to the Aberdeen Packing Company, and also that they are entitled to a judgment over for the balance of said indebtedness. In support of this position they cite Pickle v. Smalley, supra. There a mortgage was offered in evidence in connection with the constable’s return as to proceedings on foreclosure for the stated purpose of justifying the seizure under foreclosure. In this court it was insisted that it was admissible for the further purpose of showing that a debt was due from the respondent, Pickle,, to appellant, Smalley, which the appellant was entitled to offset against any judgment the respondent should be entitled to recover by reason of the conversion of the mortgaged property. The offered evidence was excluded below for any purpose, and this court, in sustaining the ruling of the lower court, held that, as it was not offered for the purpose of showing the amount of indebtedness, it could not now be so considered, and in any event could not be considered, for the reason that the mortgage itself was not evidence of the indebtedness, and in that connection said:
“Had the appellants offered in this connection the note or other proof of the debt, there might have been some force to the contention, but the mortgage itself would*181 prove nothing. It purported to he security for a promissory note given by the respondent to appellant Smalley, and could not be evidence that the note remained due or unpaid, and therefore was not admissible for the reason assigned.”
We presume it is upon the authority of the above statement that counsel cite said case here, but the principle involved was not discussed by the court, and the point was not really decided in that case. The language of the court may he said to amount to no more than a suggestion that there might have been some force in the contention if the notes had been offered in evidence. In the case at bar both the notes and mortgages are in evidence. Ho objection was made to the introduction thereof, and it was stipulated that the amount due was not disputed, said amount being the sum set up in the first affirmative defense above outlined. We think the effect of the answer was to plead a counterclaim against any sum which might be found due for conversion. Ho demurrer was interposed to this portion of the answer, and, as we have said, no objection was made to the introduction and consideration of the evidence as to the amount of respondent’s indebtedness. If respondent sought to object to the answer on the ground that it did not constitute a proper counterclaim, he should have demurred for that reason, or in any event should have objected to the introduction and consideration of the evidence in support of the counterclaim. It is true, the statute provides that objection may be made to a complaint for the first time in this court on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and, if it be conceded that the same rule applies to an answer which pleads a counterclaim, yet, when evidence has been introduced without objection in support of the allegations, the defect has been cured. Coats
In the last named ease the court said:
“Por aught we know, full and satisfactory proof as to these very allegations may have been introduced by the plaintiff without objection on the part of the defendant, and if such was the fact, we are satisfied that it could not be successfully urged that the defect in the complaint was not cured.”
It seems unnecessary to enter upon a discussion here as to whether the answer is strictly a counterclaim, within the meaning of our statute. The determination of that subject is.one of some difficulty, in view of the apparent elasticity of the statute upon the subject. Section 4913, Bal. Code, defines what may be pleaded as a counterclaim. Subdivision 1 is as follows:
“A cause of action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or connected with the subject of the action.”
Similar statutes exist in many of the states, and the term “transaction,” and also the phrase “connected with the subject of the action,” are so comprehensive that the courts have found much difficulty in applying them to the manifold combinations which arise in the cases. We will not pursue that subject here, however, since, as we have seen, if this answer is not strictly a counterclaim, within the statute, it has been cured bv failure.to object to the evidence in support of it. The court found the value of the property converted to be $175 and the answer and the proofs show that the property of respondent which was sold under the áttempted foreclosure proceedings brought the aggregate sum of $350, which sum the mortgagee now has. The demands, therefore, seem to stand as
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to the court below to enter judgment in accordance with this opinion.
Reavis, C. J., and Pullerton, Anders, Mount and Dunbar, JJ., concur.