55 Wis. 593 | Wis. | 1882
The following facts touching the vital question in this case were proved on the trial: Some time before the 23d day of November, 1878, the appellant left a horse and certain scavenger machines for safe keeping with the rer spondent, as an innkeeper, with whom he also boarded at different times, and on that day he tendered to the respondent the sum of $90 as his charges .thereon for such safe keeping and board, and demanded the property, and the respondent claimed that such charges were $123, and refused to deliver the same without the full payment thereof. After-wards the respondent notified the appellant to come and take away his property, and the appellant came on the 17th day of December following and took away the horse, and promised that he would take away the machines the nest day, but he did not come, and the respondent 'called upon him on the 23d, and the appellant said the reason he did not come, as he promised, to take away the machines, was that he had been sick and unable to do so, and that he would come as soon as he got well. The parties again met on the 30th, and the appellant said he had been worse and could not
If there can be a case in which such a conversion is waived by tbe subsequent conduct of the parties, this is certainly such a case. (1) There was an offer on tbe part of tbe respondent to debver tbe property unconditionally on the terms fixed by the appellant, which in itself waived it (Hayward v. Seaward, 1 Moore & S., 459; 1 Add. on Torts, § 472), and made a future demand necessary before suit; (2) this offer to deliver was repeated several times, and was prevented by the negligence and sickness of tbe appellant, and by no fault of tbe respondent; (3) tbe appellant took away part of tbe
The circuit judge, in charging the jury that a demand and refusal to deliver “ were not in themselves an actual conversion, but only evidence of it ” (and this was the effect of the instruction), committed no error. 1 Add. on Torts, § 529. The appellant having properly failed in his suit by failure to prove a conversion of the property, no other matter treated in the respective briefs of counsel need be considered.
By the Go%vrt. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.