41 Ala. 687 | Ala. | 1868
This is an action to recover personal property, in the form prescribed by the Code, and is analogous to the common-law action of detinue. The action was brought on the third day of April, 1861, and had for its object the recovery of slaves. It was tried, and judgment rendered, in October, 1866, after the slaves were emancipated, for the slaves or their value. A reversal is sought, upon the ground, that the court must judicially know that the slaves had ceased to be property before the judgment, and that the termination by legal authority, of property pendente lite, deprived the plaintiff of a right to the judgment he obtained.
That the death of slaves, pending an action of detinue for the recovery of them, does not affect the plaintiff’s right to a judgment for the property or its alternate value, is res adjudicata in this State.—White v. Ross, 5 St. & P. 123 ; Bettis v. Taylor, 8 Porter, 564; Bell v. Pharr, 7 Ala. 807; Johnson v. Marshall, 34 Ala. 521. The weight of authority in other States is to the same effect.—Carrel v. Early, 4 Bibb, 276 ; Caldwell v. Fenwick, 2 Dana, 332 ; Barsksdale v. Appleberry, 22 Missouri, (2 Jones,) 389; Haile v. Hill, 13 Missouri, 612 ; Austin v. Jones, 1 Virginia R. (Gilmer,) 341; Bethea v. McLennan, 1 Iredell’s Law, 523. These are all the decisions, bearing upon the question, which we have found.
In Haile v. Hill, (supra,) there is a dictum, the import of which can not be determined with certainty on account of the imperfect report of the case, but which seems to assert that, in case of death pending the suit, there can be no recovery of the alternate value. If such be the assertion
By reference to the opinions of Judge Coalter of Virginia, and Judge Gaston of North Carolina, it will be found that they proceed upon the postulate, that the alternative value is to be ascertained as of the time of the trial; and thence it is argued, that, as the property was of no value at that time, nothing could be recovered. We are forbidden, in this State, to reason from the same postulate ; for, here, the rule is the reverse, and the jury are permitted to fix any time between the demand and the trial for ascertaining the value.—Johnson v. Marshall, 34 Ala. 521.
Our old decision in White v. Ross, made in 1833, has never been questioned in .this State, but has at least been indirectly sanctioned in later cases. It is consistent with our decisions, as to the latitude allowed to the jury in the selection of the time for the ascertainment of the value, and has, therefore, a strong claim to our respect as an authority. Beyond this, however, it is sustained by reason and justice. When an owner’s property has been converted, there immediately springs up in his favor a right to have its value; and that right may be enforced in an action of trover, without the peril of. defeat by the death or des true
We attach little importance to the argument drawn from the supposed absurdity of rendering a judgment for property which has ceased to exist. The judgment is not for the property, but for it or its alternate value. The alternative is provided for the case where the property is not attainable. If the defendant here had sold the property in, the fall of 1861, for its full value, and received payment for it, it would be so shocking to justice, for him to be relieved from the payment of the alternate value by the subsequent death of the slaves, that the proposition would not be asserted ; and yet the judgment, in that ease, would be for that which had ceased to exist, or its alternate value. The plaintiff has been deprived of the possession of his property. Had he obtained possession, he might have sold it, and realized its full value. If we could look at the fact indicated by the record and commented upon by the counsel, that the plaintiff sought to recover the property as mortgagee, we would perceive very clearly, that the plaintiff could have sold the property and discharged the debt, if there had not been a wrongful detention from him. It is unjust and unconscientious, under such circumstances, that the loss, if it had resulted from death, should fall upon the plaintiff.
We have argued the question upon the supposition, that the defendant retaining the property is in the wrong. We do not mean moral wrong, for a party may fail in the defense of an action, who supposes himself to have a valid title. But the question which we have considered can not arise, except when the verdict is against the defendant, and there is thereby an ascertainment that he was legally in the wrong in the retention of the property which is the subject of litigation. It is, therefore, a legitimate assumption in the argument of the question, that the defendant is a wrongdoer, and a legitimate conclusion, that he, wrongfully keeping and converting another’s property, does it at his peril.
The case of Cole v. Conolly, 16 Ala. 271, is so manifestly distinguishable from this, as to require but little remark. In that case, the property was in the legal custody of an officer, and was taken away from him by a judicial proceeding, which was held valid and binding upon the adverse party. It distinguishes between a cessation of plaintiff’s title resulting from death or destruction, and such a cessation resulting from a change of title as between different citizens.
The judgment is affirmed.