This сase originated in the Magistrate Court of St. Louis County on a petition containing the formal averments of the old common law action of trover, it being alleged that on a certain day plaintiff was the owner of, and entitled to the possession of, a plaster mixing machine of the value of $300 which the defendant then and there “wrongfully took,” and that “defendant-refused to return the same and unlawfully converted and disposed of said property for his own use.” On appeal to the Circuit Court trial was begun before a jury, but at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the trial court sustained a motion for directеd verdict in defendant’s favor and judgment was entered accordingly. The propriety of that ruling is the sole question presented here.
Plaintiff was the only witness who testified. From his rather sketchy account of the аffair these facts emerge: Plaintiff was a plastering contractor who owned the machine in question and used it in his work. It was worth its alleged value. During the month of May, 1960, he took the machine to the site of a jоb on which he expected to be engaged in the near future and left it there. One Schwerdtfeger was the building contractor on that job, and defendant was employed there as a bricklayer. While the machine remained there, unused, Schwerdtfeger called plaintiff’s wife one-day and stated that one of the bricklayers’’ machines (presumably defendant’s) had broken down. He asked permission to use plаintiff’s. Plaintiff’s wife replied that plaintiff was absent at the moment but that upon his return she would have him reply to the request. Upon his return plaintiff did call Schwerdtfeger and learned' from him that in the meantime the machine hаd been used without waiting for his permission, “and he said they had cleaned it out. and that was all that was said about it.”
A week or so thereafter plaintiff went out to the job site, found his machine gone
Wе would be warranted in refusing to consider the propriety of the trial court’s ruling on the motion because the point has not been properly preserved for review. Plaintiff’s motion for new trial recited five so-called “grounds,” the first four of which were: “1. Because the verdict is against the law. 2. Because the verdict is against the evidence. 3. Because the verdict is against the law, the evidence, and thе law under the evidence. 4. Because the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.” (The fifth ground, equally vague, related to the alleged refusal of the trial court to admit certain evidence; but the record discloses no attempt to adduce any such evidence, and no offer of proof was made, and on this appeal the point has been voluntarily abandoned).
All four of the quotеd “grounds” have been held to be wholly insufficient to preserve for appellate review the propriety of the trial court’s action in sustaining the motion for directed verdict. Commenting on identical аssignments in a motion for new trial under review in Marquand Development Corp. v. Maisak-Handler Shoe Co., Mo.,
It is suggested to us by Rule 79.04, V.A. M.R., however, that we should examine the record for “plain errors affecting substantial rights” and rule on them, even though not properly preserved for review, if we deem that the ends of justice require it. We have made that examination, as our review of the facts discloses, and reluctantly, have concluded that the learned trial сourt committed a “plain error” in sustaining defendant’s motion. Plaintiff’s evidence made a submissible case on the question of conversion.
It is true there was no evidence of demand or refusal, but those mattеrs “ * * * are mereiy evidential, not creative, and they need not be shown to make out a case of conversion where some other independent act of conversion (some act in opposition to the rights of the owner) is in evidence.” Sigmund v. Lowes, Mo. App.,
The controlling fact shown by the record is that defendant took the machine and usеd it as if it were his own without plaintiff’s permission. That was an “act in opposition to the rights of the owner.” That was a conversion of it. “A wrongful assumption of property is not merely evidence of, but actual сonversion.” Proctor v. Home Trust Co.,
The question remains, however, as to whether such еrror affects any “substantial right” of plaintiff’s. His property has been returned to him, it is in good condition, and he has neither proved nor offered to prove any actual damages resulting from defendant’s temрorary appropriation of it. But, “[a]lthough no actual loss is shown, if there has been a technical conversion the defendant is liable for at least nominal damages.” 89 C.J.S. Trover and Conversion § 161, p. 642, supra. And “ * * * in this jurisdiction a judgment for nominal damages is a substantial right since such a judgment decides the incidence of the costs.” Curd v. Reaban, Mo.,
The Curd case makes it clear, however, that the failure to award nominal damages violates a plaintiff’s
substantial
rights only whеn, and only because, the judgment carries with it the costs of the action. In that case the trial court, 'after hearing all the evidence offered by both sides, found the issue in plaintiff’s favor but neglected to mаke an award of nominal damages although the costs were properly taxed against defendant. It was held on appeal that the omission of any award of nominal damages did not, by itself, require а reversal. The judgment was accordingly affirmed; and rightly so, both on the principle expressed by the maxim
de minimis non curat lex
and in furtherance of the public interest in discouraging the protracted' litigation of inconsequential grievances. Those same considerations suggest a similarly practical solution for this case; as, for instance, a remand with instructions to the trial court simply to retax the costs against defendant. Wе may not resort to that expedient here, however, because to do so would be to deprive defendant of his right to have the jury pass on his possible defenses and, incidentally but importantly,
The Special Commissioner so recommends.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by L. F. COT-TEY, Special Commissioner, is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
The judgment is accordingly reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
