Ed Storms appeals from a judgment awarding him compensatory and punitive monetary damages for the conversion of his house, but denying him the return of the house itself. As we find no error, we affirm.
Storms placed a movable frame house on cement blocks on land owned by a third party. Upon discovering that utilities were not available to the property, Storms left the house on the land until it could be moved to a different location. Approximately two years later, appellee Charles Reid purchased the property without knowing that Storms owned the house. Reid subsequently spent around $18,000.00 on restoration and improvements to the house. Storms saw the restored house and demanded that Reid pay him for it. When Reid refused to do so, Storms filed suit for conversion.
In four points of error Storms contends that the trial court erred in awarding him monetary damages instead of the house itself. We disagree and overrule all four points of error.
Storms contends that, as the owner of converted property, he had the option to sue either for its specific recovery or for its market value. However, the cases upon which he relies all mention this point in dicta in the context of holding that a property owner cannot be forced to accept a tender of the converted goods by the wrongdoer where a money judgment was awarded against the wrongdoer. In
Woldert v. Nedderhut Packing & Provision Co.,
Whether the plaintiff has an absolute right to elect to sue for the converted property was not at issue in any of these cases. This line of cases attempts to fully compensate the plaintiff by not forcing him to accept the defendant’s tender of the converted property instead of money damages. Thus, Storms has cited no cases which are directly on point.
Moreover, it would constitute unjust enrichment to award the house to Storms. The trial court assessed its fair market value at the time of conversion at $1,200.00. Reid spent $18,000.00 on it in improvements and restoration. In conversion cases, “compensation for the injury is the result to be obtained;” while the wrongdoer is not permitted to profit from his own wrong, the same rule should apply to the aggrieved party.
Minter v. Sparks,
Although the Woldert line of cases apparently gives the plaintiff an election between suing for the return of the converted property or its fair market value, this election is subservient to the doctrine that the “object is to compensate for the injury” promulgated in Minter v. Sparks and Kennann v. Deats. In conversion cases, the trial court must be given the discretion required to fashion an equitable remedy. If allowing the plaintiff to elect to recover the converted property itself will over-compensate him for his injury, then the election must be taken away from the plaintiff. The trial court cannot be forced to order an inequitably large recovery at the plaintiff’s option. Here, the trial court properly limited Storms’ recovery to the fair market value of the house at the time and place of conversion.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
