36 Colo. 526 | Colo. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court:
This was an action brought by M. G. Palmer, Edwin P. Estes and The Post Printing and Publishing Company, as plaintiffs, against the appellees, for damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiffs by reason of the wrongful taking and conversion by the defendants of a stock of goods alleged to have been, at the time of the taking', the property of plaintiffs, and in the possession of their agent under and by virtue of the terms of a chattel mortgage given to secure pre-existing indebtedness due plaintiffs.
The complaint alleged substantially, that March 1, 1897, Charles A. Estes was the owner and in the possession of property, and on that day was indebted to plaintiffs in certain amounts evidenced by promissory notes, to secure the payment of which he executed a chattel mortgage upon the property, which was duly filed for record, and on the same date the property was taken possession of by the agent of the mortgagees; and while the property was so in the possession of plaintiffs, the defendants wrongfully and unlawfully took possession of same and converted same and the proceeds of sale thereof to their own use.
The defendants, by a joint answer, denied the material allegations of the complaint; justified the
The reply met the affirmative allegations of new matter in the answer. -
At the close of plaintiffs ’' testimony the court directed a verdict in favor of defendants, whereon a judgment of dismissal against plaintiffs was entered, to review which this writ of error is prosecuted.
The only question for review is, the action of • the court in directing a verdict.
This ruling was based upon the proposition that plaintiffs, by their pleadings charged defendants with a joint tort; that the evidence introduced failed to prove the cause of action alleged.
An exhaustive review of plaintiffs ’ evidence upon the only point involved will not be attempted; it would accomplish no beneficial purpose. Very briefly stated the evidence may be said to establish, that at about 8:30 a. m. March 2,1897, a deputy sheriff came 'to the store where the property was, with a writ of execution or 'attachment in favor of one of the defendants and against the property of C. A. Estes, and said that he took possession of the stock of goods under the writ by direction of the parties; that at 10 a. m., 2 p. m., and 5 p. m. of the same day other writs in favor of other defendants and against said Estes were delivered to the samé officer; that the officer, was in the store continuously from 8:30 a. m. to 5 -.30 p. m.; that during this entire time plaintiffs ’ agent was also in the store, but that the officer did
It is contended by plaintiffs in error that the answer admits the joint taking.
We do not so read the answer.
Paragraph six of the complaint is: “ That while the said goods and chattels were in the possession of the plaintiff, as aforesaid, the said defendants, * * * wrongfully, forcibly, and against the plaintiff’s protest at the time made, and without plaintiff’s consent, took the afore described goods and chattels situate at number 921 Sixteenth street aforesaid, from the plaintiffs and have ever since kept the same, converted the same or the proceeds from the sale thereof to their own use in the county and state aforesaid. ”
The foregoing is the only allegation in the complaint setting up the taking and conversion of the property. This allegation is denied by the answer” as follows:
“That they deny that the defendants mentioned in paragraph numbered ‘Sixth’ in plaintiffs’ said complaint, or any of them, took the goods and chattels in said complaint described when they were in the possession of the plaintiffs or any of them, or in any manner as in said complaint alleged.”
Further, the second affirmative defense of defendants contains a paragraph setting forth the separate levies of the several writs in favor of the several
This contention of plaintiffs in error is not tenable under the pleadings as set forth in the record.
The fact that several defendants gave the sheriff separate and independent indemnity bonds did not tend to prove that by thus ratifying the actions of the sheriff each defendant thereby made itself a joint tort feasor with the other defendants.
The authorities are to the effect that the giving of an indemnifying bond' to an officer holding a writ is a ratification of the acts of the officer and nothing more.
No authority has been cited and we know of none which holds that the separate and distinct act of giving an indemnifying bond ’to an officer by each of a number of creditors pursuing their remedy under separate writs, constitutes such creditors joint tort feasors.
We do not believe the mere fact of joining in a ' joint answer by defendants who are charged with joint liability has any weight as evidence to prove such joint liability in the absence of proof of other acts or facts which would prove such joint liability.
The court in ruling upon the motion for a directed verdict, at the request of counsel for plaintiffs in error, stated the ground upon which the ruling was made as follows:
“The motion is granted on the ground that there is no joint wrong proven, and that there is insufficient evidence to show concert of action among the defendants. ”
It is 'contended that the court thereby invaded the province of-the.jury and passed upon the sufficiency of the evidence.
As was said in Brown v. Potter, 13 Colo. App. 512, 514:
“When we conclude, as we do, that the court reached a correct conclusion respecting the testimony, it was both his right and his duty to direct a verdict because it was a casé wherein if a verdict had been rendered otherwise, it must have been set aside as against the testimony. Under these circumstances, the duty of the trial court is exceedingly plain.— Tripp v. Fiske, 4 Colo. 24; Guldager v. Rockwell, 14 Colo. 459; Burlington R. Co. v. Budin, 6 Colo. App. 275; U. P. R. Co. v. Sternberg, 13 Colo. 141; Stratton v. U. P. R. Co., 7 Colo. App. 126.’’
The question then is, was there sufficient evidence to warrant the court in submitting to the jury the issue of joint liability by reason of the joint acts of the defendants ?
It is admitted that the action was against the defendants as joint tort feasors. A failure to prove the joint liability of all the defendants was a failure to prove the cause of action alleged. Proof of several separate and distinct liens or trespasses was fatal to the cause of action and warranted the court in directing a verdict.
The rule is thus stated by Pomeroy in his work on Remedies and Remedial Rights (2d ed.), page 265:
“In order, however, that the general rule thus stated should apply, and a union of wrong-doers in one action should be possible, there must be some community in the wrong-doing among the parties*533 who are to he united as co-defendants; the injury must in some sense be their joint work. It is not enough that the injured party has, on certain grounds, a cause of action against one, for the physical tort done to himself or his property and has, on entirely different grounds, a cause of action against another for the same physical tort; there must be something more than the existence of two separate causes of action for the same act or default, to enable him to join the two parties liable in the single action. This principle is of universal application.”
“Persons who act severally and independently, each causing a separate and distinct injury, cannot .be sued jointly, even though the injuries may have been precisely similar in character and inflicted at the same time. A joint tort is essential to the maintenance of a joint action. For separate and distinct wrongs in nowise connected by the ligament of a common purpose actual or implied by law, the wrongdoers are liable only in separate actions, and not jointly in the same action. ” (Citing cases.) 15 Ency. PL & Pr., 562.
The principle is the same whether the question is ex contractu or ex delicto.
In York v. Fortenbury, 15 Colo. 129, a joint loan . to the plaintiffs was pleaded as a defense. At the trial evidence was offered to show a separate loan to one of the plaintiffs. This offer was rejected and upon appeal the rejection was held proper. The court said:
“The answer averred a joint loan to the plaintiffs. The proof rejected showed that the loan in question was made to Fortenbury individually, Carson deriving no benefit therefrom, and not being in any way connected therewith. The allegation of a loan to both plaintiffs is not sustained by proof of an individual loan t.o one of them. There was, there*534 fore, such, a variance between the pleading in question and tbe proof offered as justified the court’s rejection of the latter.”
Other cases announcing the same doctrine are: Williams v. Sheldon, 10 Wend. 654; Keys v. Little York Gold Washing and Water Co., 53 Cal. 725; Blaisdell v. Stevens, 14 Nev. 1; Forbes v. Marsh, 15 Conn. 384; Larkins v. Eckwurzell, 43 Ala. 322; Miller v. Highland Ditch Co., 87 Cal. 433.
The great weight of authority supports the principle that, where two or more parties act each for himself and independently of each other in a proceeding, the results of which may be injurious to another, they cannot be jointly held liable for the acts, of each other.
Reithman v. Godsman, 23 Colo. 203, is relied upon by plaintiffs in error. This was a case in which Reithman and the sheriff are sued as defendants to recover damages for taking and converting the property of Godsman under a writ issued against one Dunnagan. There was, in that case, no question of the joint wrong' of two or more attaching creditors, and what is there said as to the effect of giving an indemnity bond to the sheriff, as an act of ratification, goes only to the extent of holding that such act was a ratification of the acts of the sheriff only. The expression of the court in that case to the effect that, when two writs of attachment are actually levied and action taken at the same time “the plaintiffs in both actions may be liable for the taking, ’ ’ is not an authority to the point that such plaintiffs would be liable in a joint action, or could be held as joint tort feasors, in the absence of evidence tending to prove, or proving, concert of action between the parties.
Stone v. Dickinson, 5 Allen. 29, cited by counsel for plaintiffs in error, is the Only authority to which
Upon principle and authority, we believe the rule to be as above quoted. •
We have examined the entire record with care, and fail to find any competent evidence therein that there was any concert of action between the several attachment and judgment creditors, or any ligament of common purpose which would make them liable as joint tort feasors for the acts of which complaint is made.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Gabbert and Mr. Justice Gunter concurring. _