60 So. 502 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
All of the evidence shows that Hardison was employed by the plaintiff to keep possession of the property described in the complaint for him, and as the evidence shows, without dispute, that the plaintiff paid Hardi
. As the jury, by their verdict found for all the defendants on the plea of the statute of limitations, our consideration of this case will be confined to the evidence tending to establish that plea and to the charge of the court on that subject.
Not only does the evidence for the plaintiff and the evidence of Hardison show that Hardison at no time prior to November 28, 1904, occupied any relation to the property described in the complaint to the knowledge of plaintiff other than that of bailee for the plaintiff, but all the other evidence in the case strengthens this view. In examining one of the defendants — Carloss— the defendants, for the purpose of contradicting the attorney for the plaintiff, elicited from the said Car-loss that after the interview in Tuscaloosa in which the defendants claim that the plaintiff surrendered his claim to the mill, and agreed that it was to be the property of Forbes & Carloss, and after the 28th 'of November, 1904, when plaintiff paid Hardison for keeping possession of and guarding the mill, the attorney for plaintiff came to his office in Reform, and “demanded of him
The only theory upon which the jury could, under the evidence, have arrived at the conclusion that the claim of the plaintiff was barred by the statute of limitations of six years, was that, when Forbes & Carloss took from the,mill the edger, they in fact at that time took possession of the entire mill with the intent to convert it to their own use; that, in fact, the conversion of the entire property by Forbes & Carloss then took place; and that as this occurred on or about October 6, 1904, more than six years before this suit was brought, plaintiff’s claim was therefore barred by the statute of limitations of six years. In the conversion of the edger,, Hardison, as events afterwards disclosed, participated, but his participation in the conversion was not, according to all the testimony and all of the tendencies of the
The evidence certainly failed to sustain the plea as to all the defendants, and the trial court, therefore, committed reversible error in giving to the jury at the written request of the defendant charge 6. If all the evidence is to be believed, the plaintiff could not have maintained an action of trover against Hardison for the property described in the complaint until after November 28, 1904.
This action, like all other actions of trespass on the case, is an equitable action, and in this action, as in other such actions, the damages may be mitigated or aggravated according to the circumstances of the particular case, and, when the wrongful conversion is accompanied by acts of outrage, insult, or other misconduct of the wrongdoer justifying their imposition, exemplary damages at the discretion of the jury may be imposed upon the wrongdoer.
We think in the above opinion we have sufficiently indicated to the trial court our views as to the legal' principles which should govern it upon the next trial of this case, if one is had.
Reversed and remanded.
Note. — The foregoing opinion was prepared by Judgede G-raffenried while he was a judge of this court, and. is adopted by the court.