73 Colo. 412 | Colo. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action by the Lininger ‘ Implement Company, as plaintiff, against The Queen City Foundry' Company, as defendant, would be trover at the common law. Its object is to recover damages for the conversion by the defendant of one hundred and five (105) Giddings beet pullers, the property of the plaintiff. The answer alleges that defendant has always recognized plaintiff’s ownership of these beet pullers. They were delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant for reconstruction, and were rebuilt, and, after completion of the work, have always been, and now are, subject to delivery to the plaintiff upon demand, when payment is made for the agreed cost of the work, which constitutes a statutory lien upon the machines. It denies that any legal demand has ever been made upon, or refused by, the defendant. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant’s motion for nonsuit was granted, and the action was dismissed with prejudice.
The defendant is a manufacturer, and. the plaintiff is a wholesaler or jobber. In July, 1919, they entered into a
In plaintiff’s opening and closing briefs, of about 200 pages, we find no statement of facts. It would be difficult, if not impossible, to know from these briefs what the controversy between these parties is, or what the facts are to which correct rules of law are to be applied. Not every act of interference with the owner’s right to personal property is a conversion. That word has been defined as any distinct, unauthorized act of dominion or ownership exercised by one person over, personal property belonging to another. 38 Cyc. 2005; Murphy v. Hobbs, 8 Colo. 17, 5 Pac. 637; Omaha & G. S. & R. Co. v. Tabor, 13 Colo. 41, 54, 21 Pac. 925, 5 L. R. A. 236, 16 Am. St. Rep. 185; Crosby v. Stratton, 17 Colo. App. 212, 68 Pac. 130.
A mere breach of contract will not support an action of trover.
The ruling of the court on the defendant’s motion for nonsuit is to be determined from the evidence produced by the plaintiff, and every reasonable intendment or inference that can be drawn from the same. The trial court in ruling upon this motion, said: “There is absolutely not a word or scintilla of evidence to indicate that the defendant in this case ever exercised any dominion over these beet pullers in denial of the plaintiff’s rights therein.
We have read with care the entire testimony in the case and are thoroughly convinced that the trial court was right in saying that the plaintiff’s own evidence conclusively showed that there had been no conversion by the defendant. We go farther and say that had the question been submitted to the jury upon the evidence produced and a verdict had been returned for the plaintiff, it should have been set aside. The summary of the evidence given in the foregoing statement, of itself, is a sufficient and complete answer to the contention of the plaintiff that the case should have gone to the jury. No discussion of the law of the case is necessary. Even conceding every legal proposition advanced by the plaintiff, the undisputed facts are with the defendant. The defendant was lawfully in possession of these beet pullers. They were delivered to the defendant upon plaintiff’s orders for a special purpose, which was to convert them into the latest or 1920 model for sale, as such, during 1920 and subsequent seasons. It was impossible to return or deliver them to the plaintiff as the identical property, or as the same model or kind of pullers they were when the defendant received them. The very purpose for which plaintiff delivered them contemplated that when the work of rebuilding was done, they would be different from, and other than, the pullers which the defendant received. It was necessary, even according to the plaintiff’s own admission, to take out or disconnect some of the parts of which the pullers
The evidence shows that no legal demand was ever made by the plaintiff for the return of its property, and no refusal of any such demand. The compromise agreement of November 6, provided that the defendant, upon demand, and upon payment of a sum agreed upon by the parties, would deliver these pullers. It is undisputed that both plaintiff and defendant knew at this time that they were not assembled, that is, the different parts which composed the complete pullers had been disconnected, or taken apart, and some of these parts were not even painted, which was required by the contract of rebuilding. In their disconnected condition they were, to the knowledge of both parties, in the defendant’s warehouse at Timnath, about 70 miles from the City of Denver. On the very day that the plaintiff says it accepted by letter defendant’s offer of compromise at Denver, which was November 6, Saturday, by a separate letter delivered late in the afternoon of that day, it demanded of the defendant that it load all these beet pullers, each complete, that is, each assembled and painted and in the condition required by the contract of rebuilding, upon the cars at Timnath not later than 7 o’clock on the following Wednesday morning. Even if it be conceded that this order constituted a legal
This property having come into defendant’s possession lawfully, to sustain an action of trover there must be not only a demand and a refusal, but also a tender, of the amount due on the statutory lien which defendant had on this property. 38 Cyc. 2032, 2058. There was no tender of the amount of the lien which plaintiff recognized. The statement in plaintiff’s letter that there was, or would be, money on deposit in a Denver bank, which was authorized to hand over the same to the defendant when it produced receipted bills of lading, was not a tender at all. In effect it was no more than a statement by the plaintiff that when the defendant had produced receipted bills of lading to the plaintiff itself, the plaintiff would give its check for the amount of the lien. Aside from this, it is significant as throwing light upon the lack of good faith of the plaintiff, that, in its letter of instructions to the bank, it distinctly said that if the receipted bills of lading were not delivered to the bank, on or before November 9, the deposit was to be returned to the plaintiff and not given to the defendant, although, according to the alleged demand of the plaintiff for the loading of these pullers, the defendant was not required to complete the loading until 7 o’clock in the forenoon of November 10. The defendant would not be likely to receive bills of lading from the railroad company until the loading was finished, and even if the load
Plaintiff’s contention that the defendant waived the tender, because the amount'to which it claimed a lien was in part for work upon other beet pullers, and that the alleged refusal was on other grounds is not well taken. The plaintiff alleges that it accepted the defendant’s offer of November 4, and, if that is true, such acceptance estops the plaintiff to say that it was not, when it demanded delivery, obliged to pay the amount of the lien. Payment was the condition of the compromise contract upon which the right to a delivery depended. According to plaintiff’s own admission, there was a considerable sum due for defendant’s work upon these very pullers for which it had a statutory lien and it was necessary, to support this action, to tender the exact amount due, which' plaintiff failed to do.
We entertain no doubt whatever about the correctness of the rulings of the trial court. Its judgment is accordingly affirmed.