102 P. 320 | Mont. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
Action in claim and delivery. The plaintiff seeks to recover the possession of one gold ring with Tiffany setting, containing two diamonds and one ruby, of the alleged value of $1,000. The pleadings present the usual issues as to title and right to possession in plaintiff, the wrongful detention by the defendants, and the value. Upon the evidence submitted upon these issues, the jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find our verdict for the plaintiff and against the defendants. We find that Sophia Sullivan, the plaintiff is the owner and entitled to the possession of the property in controversy, the ring. We find that the value of the ring is eight hundred and fifty dollars ($850). We find that the plaintiff has been damaged by the detention of the property by the defendants in the sum of no dollars.” Judgment was thereupon rendered and entered for plaintiff. Defendants have appealed from the judgment and an order denying them a new trial.
1. The first contention made is that the verdict is not sufficient to support the judgment, in that it does not respond to the material issue of wrongful detention by defendants. Counsel cites Glass v. Basin & Bay State Min. Co., 31 Mont. 21, 77 Pac. 302, as authority for the proposition that it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to allege and prove that at the commencement of the action the defendants wrongfully detained
2. It is said that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict, in that it fails to establish the fact that the defendants were in possession of the ring when the action was brought. Whatever may be the rule elsewhere, it is settled in this jurisdiction that the right to maintain the action depends upon the situation and condition of things at the time it is brought. The purpose of it being to recover possession of the specific property, or, in the alternative, the value of it in case the possession cannot be had, the person who has possession of it and wrongfully detains it is the proper person to be sued. The action must therefore fail if the evidence shows that, when it was commenced, the defendant had parted with the possession. (Glass v. Basin & Bay State Min. Co., 31 Mont. 21, 77 Pac. 302; Osmers v. Furey, 32 Mont. 581, 81 Pac. 345.) In this respect the action differs from an action in conversion. In conversion present possession of the property is immaterial, because the plaintiff seeks compensation for the wrongful taking or detention, by way of damages (Riciotto v. Clement, 94 Cal. 105, 29 Pac. 414), and it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to go no further than to show his title or right of possession, the value, and the wrongful taking or detention.
This action was brought on October 26, 1907. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show the following: The ring in controversy was taken by the minor daughter of the plaintiff, without her
. Taking into consideration the direct and implied admissions made by the defendants subsequent to the time of the alleged pledge to Snyder, as testified to by plaintiff’s witnesses, together with their somewhat evasive, incongruous, and contradictory statements on the stand, and their failure to produce the witness Snyder or other evidence to confirm their story of the pledge to him, the credit to which they were entitled presented a question for the jury. It was exclusively within their province to say whether defendants’ testimony was of sufficient weight to overcome the prima facie case made out by the plaintiff.
3. It is said that the court erred in permitting the witness Sullivan to testify as to the value of the ring, in that he had not qualified as an expert. It appeared from his preliminary statement: That he had frequently priced and purchased precious stones in New York, Chicago, and Butte; that he had pur
The plaintiff had not secured delivery of the ring at the commencement of the action, and defendants had been notified by plaintiff’s counsel to produce it at the trial in order that it might be examined by the witnesses upon the question of its value and be inspected by the jury. The defendants refused to produce it. In order to obtain some expert testimony on the subject of value, Sullivan was permitted to describe the ring, stating the apparent quality and size of the stones, as compared with a similar one exhibited to the jury. Thereupon the witness Barry, a jeweler of experience and for many years a dealer in precious stones, was permitted to express his opinion as to the value of the ring in controversy, by comparison of it with the one exhibited to the jury, upon the description given of the other by Sullivan. Objection was made to this testimony on the ground that it was incompetent, for the reason that the evidence as to the resemblance between the two rings was too vague to furnish the basis of an estimate. That it is competent for an expert witness to base his opinion, as to value, upon a description of the article in controversy, seems too clear to admit of doubt; otherwise, owing to lack of knowledge or capacity in those who have seen it, it would often be impossible to establish its value. An opinion based upon such a description- merely may not be so satisfactory as in the ease where the witness bases his opinion upon his own observation; yet the admissibility of it rests upon the same basis as an opinion
We find no error in the record. The judgment and order are therefore affirmed.
'Affirmed.