22 Md. 312 | Md. | 1864
After stating the case, {ante pp. 313, 314,)
delivered the opinion of this Court as follows:
The first and second exceptions raise the question of how far the judgment in the action of replevin, concludes the obligors in the bond. The appellant contends, that wherever the title to property is in issue or might have been in issue in the original proceedings, that question becomes “res adjudicata,” and cannot afterwards in any subsequent proceedings be inquired into: he assimilates this to a case of sci. fa., where any defence which might have been pleaded to the original action cannot be set up against the sci. fa.
In the case of Belt vs. Worthington, 3 G. & J., 252, ARCHER, Justice, declared: “The object of the law in prescribing a replevin bond shall be entered into by a plaintiff before he should have the benefit of the writ, was only to give indemnity to the defendant. If in truth he had no right to the property at the time of the institution of the suit, the rejection of the evidence by putting it in his power to recover the value of the goods, would enable him to overreach a just measure of indemnity, and inflict a penalty which the law never contemplated.” Repudiating the analogies sought to be established in that case, to judgments by default in actions on appeal bonds and money contracts, he said the action of replevin was “sui generis,” — “the recovery on the replevin bond ought to
It is obvious from the theory and illustration given in the above extract, that the judgment in replevin, does not conclude the obligors in the bond, from proving by the proceedings in the cause, or aliunde, the character of the possessory right, upon which the plaintiffs in the action on the bond, recovered in the replevin suit. If from these it appears that the relation between the parties to the action in replevin, was that of landlord and tenant, cultivating or renting on shares, and that the subject of replevin was the crop then growing upon the farm of the landlord; such evidence shows a qualified property, or joint right of possession, which would defeat the action of replevin by the tenant, and at the same time diminish the claim for damages on the part of the landlord, founded on his “prima facie” right to the value of the appraisement, showing he was entitled to but a moiety of the same. Such testimony was proper to rebut the “prima facie” case of the plaintiffs on the bond.
His right to damages must be confined to the extent of bis ownership over the property replevied. If as joint owner of the property, he was entitled to such possession, as precluded his tenant from replevying, and secured him a judgment of “retorno hdbendo,” yet his title was not so absolute and entire, as to entitle him to recover of the principal or surety, the full value of the property, or more than the value of his share of the crops. If we are correct in these premises, it necessarily follows, that the prayer offered on the part of the appellant was not proper, since it required the Court to instruct the jury that the appraisement was the measure of damages; this we have seen was but “prima facie” evidence subject to be rebutted by such testimony as was offered on the part of the appellee. The modification of the appellant’s prayer hy the Court, in our judgment, proposed the just standard of damages; and there being no error in the several rulings excepted to, the judgment below will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.