21 Ind. App. 650 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
The only question presented by the record in this case is the action of the court in sustaining a demurrer to the amended complaint. The complaint is in one paragraph, and avers that appellants were partners engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling fertilizers, at wholesale, and that appellees were partners engaged in selling fertilizers at retail; that on the 6th of July, 1896, appellants and appellees entered into a written contract, by the terms of which appellees were to act as agents of appellants for the sale of fertilizers at Columbus, Indiana; that by said contract it was expressly understood and agreed that the title and ownership of all the fertilizers received by appellees under said contract should remain vested in appellants until sold by appellees; and that, until so sold, the same should at all times be subject
The only objection that appellees make to the amended complaint is that the action is based upon a written contract, and that neither the contract nor a copy thereof is filed with the complaint. If the basis of the action is the written contract between the parties, and which is referred to in the complaint, then there can be no question but what it must be made a part of the complaint by being copied bodily into it, or made a part of it by exhibit. The statute so provides, and all the authorities so hold. Section 366, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (363, Horner’s R. S. 1897); Brown v. State, 44 Ind. 222. Additional authorities, numerous as they are, would be useless. It is insisted by appellant, however, that the action is not founded upon the contract, but upon the facts which charge a conversio.n. It has long been recognized in this State that a right of action ex contractu may be waived, and the party so waiving it seek his remedy ex delicto. Lane v. Boicourt, 128 Ind. 420; Boor v. Lowrey, 103 Ind. 468; Hess v. Lowrey, 122 Ind. 225, 7 L. R. A. 90. If that is the remedy which appellants here seek, and they are
It seems to. us -that the theory of the complaint is readily understood and plainly discernible from its averments, and that appellants ask a recovery for the wrongful conversion of money, which came into the possession of appellees, and which they have failed to turn or pay over to appellants. The demurrer admits the facts pleaded to be true, and the facts stated show a conversion of $500 in money belonging to appellants. So, we think it plain that the action is one sounding in tort, and not upon a contract. The facts do not charge a conversion of the fertilizer, for it appears from the complaint that appellees did with it what they had a right to do; i. e., they sold it in the usual course of trade. But here it is not averred that they converted the property itself to their own use, but the proceeds thereof. The money derived from the sale of the goods was as much the property of appellants, under the allegations of the complaint, as the fertilizers which appellants placed in the hands of appellees to sell; and a misapplication of such money, where it was their duty to turn it over to appellants, was a conversion of it.
In Bixel v. Bixel, 107 Ind. 534, it was held that where one takes possession of and sells personal property at the direction of the owner, but fails properly to apply or misapplies the proceeds, there is no conversion of the property, and that the liability of the seller is for the conversion or misapplication of the proceeds. In that case the court said: “If a person, having authority from the owner to sell the property and apply the proceeds, sells the property, and misapplies or converts the proceeds, he is liable for such misapplication or conversion, but does not become a wrongdoer ab in
In the case before us, under the facts stated, appellees certainly had no greater right to appellants’ money than appellant did in Bunger v. Roddy, supra. There Bunger got the money for a specific purpose, and here appellees got the money under an agreement with appellants that such money should be theirs, and with the specific promise that they would pay it over to them forthwith. In the case before us, appellees were the agents of appellants to sell the fertilizer placed in their possession, and it is well settled that, where an agent misappropriates, or misapplies, the money or property of his principal, he is guilty of conversion. Clegg v. Baumberger, 110 Ind. 536; Worley v. Moore, 97 Ind. 15.
Appellants had two remedies, to wit: (1) To declare upon the contract, and (2) to sue for conversion. They elected to pursue the latter, and have stated facts showing a conversion. Hence, as the written contract was not the basis of the action, it was wholly unnecessary to file the original or a copy of it with the complaint, and the objection urged against it for that reason is not well grounded. The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer to the amended complaint.
Henley, J., did not take part in the decision of this case.