154 Ill. 476 | Ill. | 1895
After the horses had been taken by Harms on a distress warrant, the plaintiff in this action, William Stier, brought an action of replevin and took the horses under a writ of replevin. Subsequently, on failure to file a declaration, the action of replevin was dismissed and a writ of retorno habendo awarded. This writ was issued and the horses were taken under it, and, as the jury found, returned to Harms. After the return of the horses to Harms under the writ, this action of trespass was instituted to recover the value of the horses at the time they were taken under the distress warrant. On the trial, the circuit court, in the instructions to the jury, held that the action of replevin was not a bar to the present action, but the Appellate Court held otherwise, and reversed the judgment of the circuit court, and the propriety of this ruling is the principal question presented by this record.
If there had been a recovery by Stier in the action of replevin, the judgment might be regarded as a bar to an action of trespass brought to recover the value of the same goods, as held in Karr v. Barstow, 24 Ill. 581. But there was no recovery — the plaintiff suffered a non-suit. When the goods were taken under a distress warrant the plaintiff had either of two remedies: replevin or trespass. These remedies, as we understand the authorities, were analogous, consistent and concurrent. (Wells on Replevin, sec. 44, and note; Stanley v. Gaylord, 1 Cush. 536; Butler v. Hildreth, 5 Metc. (Mass.) 49.) In the decision of the case last cited the court said : “In cases where there are two independent and collateral remedies, not inconsistent with each other, a party is not barred, by discontinuing one, from commencing a new action on the other. A man may have trespass and replevin for the same goods, but the one right is not repugnant to the other. We do not see why he might not discontinue one and commence the other at any time before he has proceeded to judgment.”
In the State of Hew York it has been held that where the remedies are inconsistent, and not concurrent, the selection of one will preclude the right to pursue the other. Thus, in Morris v. Rexford, 18 N. Y. 557, it is said: “A vendor of goods on a sale and delivery upon cash terms, if he fails to get payment, may consider the delivery absolute, and rely on the responsibility of the vendee, or he may disaffirm and reclaim his property. But he cannot do both of these things. The remedies are not concurrent, and the choice between them once being made, the right to follow the other is forever gone. The law tolerates no such absurdity as a seizure of goods by a person claiming that he has never sold them, and an action by the same person, founded on the sale and delivery of the same goods, for the recovery of the price. • In peculiar circumstances a party may take either one of these courses, but having rightfully made his choice, the right to follow the other is extinct and gone.” (Citing' numerous authorities.)
In Mills v. Parkhurst, 126 N. Y. 89, the same doctrine . is reiterated in the following language : “The doctrine of election, usually predicated of inconsistent remedies, consists in holding the party to whom several courses were open for obtaining relief, to his first election, Where, subsequently, he attempts to avail himself of some further and other remedy not consistent with, but contradictory of, his previous attitude and action upon his claim. The basis for the application of the doctrine is in the proposition that where there is, by law or con-, tract, a choice between two remedies which proceed upon opposite and irreconcilable claims of right, the one taken must exclude and bar the prosecution of the other.”
In Dyckman v. Troatson, 39 Minn. 132, the plaintiff claimed property under a chattel mortgage. After the mortgage became due he commenced an action by attachment, levied on the property, and obtained a judgment. Subsequently he commenced an action to recover the property attached, under his chattel mortgage, but the court held that plaintiff, by attaching the property as the property of another obtaining a judgment in the attachment proceeding, had assumed a position so inconsistent with his claim as mortgagee that he was concluded by the attachment proceeding.
This court has not gone as .far as the courts of New York in holding a party concluded by the bringing of an action where the remedies may be regarded inconsistent and irreconcilable, as will be seen by reference to a few cases. In Gibbs v. Jones, 46 Ill. 318, it was held, that when an action of trover is brought, an action in assumpsit between the same parties brought to recover the value of the property, and which was dismissed without prejudice, cannot be specially pleaded in bar of the action of trover. In the late case of Flower v. Brumbach, 131 Ill. 646, it was held the fact that a party has selected one of several remedies by action will not, in general, preclude him from abandoning such suit, and after having discontinued it he may adopt any other remedy.
But this seeming difference, if it exists, has no bearing on the question involved. As has been heretofore seen, replevin and trespass are not opposite and irreconcilable claims of right. When the horses were taken, Stier, if the owner, had either of two remedies: replevin, to obtain the possession of the property, or trespass, to recover its value. These remedies were not inconsistent or irreconcilable. He had the right to choose either, but the mere fact that he chose replevin, and subsequently abandoned it and allowed "the action to be dismissed and the property to be returned, did not, in our opinion, preclude him from bringing another action to recover the value of the property. The rights and obligations of the parties after the action of replevin had been dismissed and the property returned were precisely the same as they were at the time the action was commenced. Why, then, should the beginning of a suit, and its dismissal, take away a right of recovery, in an appropriate action, if one existed before? If replevin and trespass were inconsistent remedies a different rule might prevail.
The circuit court refused defendant’s third instruction, in regard to an estoppel, and this ruling is relied upon as error. Without pausing to determine whether the instruction, as prepared, was correct or incorrect, it is sufficient to say that the evidence bearing on the question of estoppel was not, in our opinion, sufficient to warrant an instruction of that character.
So far as appears from the record the rulings of the circuit court seem to be correct. The judgment of the Appellate Court will therefore be reversed and the judgment of the circuit court affirmed.
T 7 . 7 Judgment reversed.