81 N.J.L. 146 | N.J. | 1911
The opinion of the court was delivered by
First, considering tbe status of the goods mentioned in the first agreement which the court found as a matter of fact had been paid for, and therefore belonged to the defendant, and conceding that the no!ice given raised an issue of property in the defendant, and that the court was authorized upon the trial, under section 337 of the District Court act as amended in 1899 (Pamph. L., p. 558), to find the value of the goods and the damages and to enter jndg
The value of the goods was measured by the court, by the amounts which had been paid upon the contract, and this irrespective of the condition of the articles, at the time of their seizure, or what they then would have sold for. It is apparent that the time when the goods were taken is the time at which their value must be ascertained.
The amount which has been paid on account of the price of a previously-arranged executory sale, between the parties, and which had been fully executed by full payment, can have little bearing npon the value of goods at a subsequent period, when, as here, they had been subjected to wear.
In the present case, the articles had been in use in the defendant’s family, and natural wear and tear would probably depress their worth in the market. In case of the injury of any of them in excess of ordinary wear, there would be a further depletion of value, not attributable in any way to the •plaintiff.
In view of the fact that it was at the instance of the defendant that the value was asked, in lieu of a return of the identical propert3r, he should not be allowed to take a money judgment in excess of the true value of the goods, indicated by their condition at the time he was deprived of their use.
But a second reason, leading to the vacation of the judgment, is the erroneous element of damages awarded for the unlawful removal of the goods. These damages are clearly shown to be too remote.
The giving of damages for expense of washing and cleaning defendant’s apparel and household linen, made necessary by the constable’s action in placing these articles on the floor when he removed the furniture, is unwarranted. Princeton Bank v. Gibson, Spenc. 138; State v. Conover, 4 Dutcher 224.
The judgment in replevin, it has been said, is a matter for some nicety. Under statutory provisions in England, so early in date that they have become a part of our common law, the original action has been greatly changed, so that, in
Our statutes have, in the higher courts, been patterned largely after the English statutes, and in those courts, where a defendant has given bond, and has retained the custody of the property, the plaintiff, instead of a return of the goods to him, has a money judgment for their value. Gen. Stat., p. 2775, tit. Replevin, § 25. The following cases are illustrative: Frazier v. Fredericks, 4 Zab. 162; Lindauer v. Teeter, 12 Vroom 255; Field v. Post, 9 Id. 346; Maguire v. Dulton, 25 Id. 597; Bishop, &c., Co. v. Keffer, 40 Id. 47; Pedrick v. Kuemmell, 45 Id. 379.
In the case at hand, under the District Court act, the defendant has, by Ms notice, attempted to raise an issue of property, and thereby has also, by his notice, elected to recover the value of the goods instead of their return.
How, where value is given, in the generality of cases, the damages consist of the interest on such value, calculated from the time of the wrongful act, in the present case, the date of caption.
It is said, however, that this allowance of interest upon Ihe value in lieu of damages, is not a universal rule, but has its exceptions, according to the nature of ihe case, in order that true compensation may be given to the injured party.
A leading case, and one well reasoned, is Allen v. Fox, 51 N. Y. 562, which demonstrates that where property, which is capable of a special use, should be returned to the party entitled, after a long term, during which the true owner has been deprived of such use, interest upon its value would not be a proper measure of the defndant’s damages and injury.
The principles enunciated in that ease are in accord with our ideas, and where applicable, should be adopted. But are the conditions in this case such that those principles should be applied?
That case arose under the Hew York code, and as I read it, the successful party was compelled to take back the prop
But in the present case, statutory permission allowed the successful defendant, in advance of the determination of the case, to compel the court to assess the value of the goods, as the basis of a recovery of a money judgment by the defendant, which the plaintiff could not alter.
In other words, by filing a notice, the plaintiff became entitled to recover, not the goods, but their value in money, which the plaintiff was powerless to change.
The defendant was thereby enabled to effect a forced sale of the chattels to the plaintiff, and this was done entirely at the option of the defendant. In such a case, the interest on the sum to be recovered should be deemed to be a full measure of damage, for relying upon the justness of his cause, the defendant might have gone into the market as of the date of injury and bought other goods to replace those which had been taken, and in that event, the interest on the cost would have been full compensation until the verdict had been rendered and the judgment paid. So that, while we recognize that for the unlawful detention of property, having special usable qualities, where a judgment will compel the successful party to accept the property in kind and not its value, the damages may not bo measured by the interest upon its value, yet where the party, of his own volition, elects under the statute to recover in money the value of the property, and thereby prevents the other parly from making a return in kind, interest oñ such value would seem to be a proper measure of his damages. The foregoing is to be applied to the first contract.
Coming then to the goods mentioned in the second contract, it is clear that they had never been paid for, and, consequently, the title to them was still in the plaintiff, although the defendant, under the finding of the trial court, had the right of possession. Conceding that the court properly held that the plaintiff lias, as matter of fact, waived his right to enforce a forfeiture of the second agreement, by accepting
The statute. District Court act (Pamph. L. 1899, p. 558), allows ‘‘that the court upon a suggestion of property in the defendant may ascertain the value of the goods.” But the value to he ascertained is the value of the chattel, as a concrete thing, and not llie defendant’s partial interest, or estate therein. The language of the act varies, and afterwards refers to ‘‘the value of the property of the defendant in such goods,” but that undoubtedly refers tc cases where the defendant has the entire ownership of the chattel, so that the statute is applicable only where a return might be awarded as an alternative for a judgment for value. See Maguire v. Dulton, 25 Vroom 597.
To entitle a defendant, under this aci, to a judgment for the value of the goods in lieu of a return, the defendant must be entitled to the chattels, as owner, as distinguished from ownership of an interest, or partial property therein.
The award therefore of the amount paid by the defendant by wav of installments under the second contract was error.
Let the judgment be reversed to the end that a new trial mav be had.