146 Minn. 29 | Minn. | 1920
In December, 1917, defendant sold an automobile to plaintiff for $1,750. It was one of five which defendant had purchased from the Jones Motor Car Company of Wichita, Kansas. After purchasing the car, plaintiff discovered that he could not start the motor. Ineffectual attempts to start it were made by defendant’s employees, and one of them finally told plaintiff that the trouble was due to. the motor and that a new motor and starter would be placed in the car. Defendant obtained from the Jones Company a promise to replace the motors and starters in the five cars it had sold to it with others of a different type of construction. It appears that this promise was not kept. Plaintiff finally employed an attorney, who called upon defendant to put the car in such condition that it could be used. On March 26, 1918, one Beard, then a salesman for defendant, accompanied by one Ringsrud, went to the office of plaintiff’s attorney and proposed to take plaintiff’s car to Minneapolis for the purpose of installing a new motor and starter. Ringsrud was the president of the Jones Northwest Motor Car Company, located at Minneapolis, and the distributor of the Jones car in this state. The proposition was accepted. Plaintiff’s attorney testified that the car was to be turned over to defendant, and the work done and the car returned to plaintiff within two weeks. He informed plaintiff of the agreement and advised him to give up possession of his. car for the purpose above mentioned. On the same day Beard and Ringsrud went to plaintiff’s place of business and got the car, and on the following day Beard drove it to Minneapolis and delivered it to the Jones Com- - pany. It remained there from that time until February, 1919. During
In the summer of 1918 plaintiff commenced an action against defendant for damages for a breach of warranty in the sale of the car and recovered a verdict of $840, which was paid.
On December 2, 1918, he made' a written demand on defendant for the return of the car. It was not complied with, but after this action was brought defendant offered to return the remains of the car. Plaintiff refused to receive it. There was testimony that defendant’s president, one Whiteside, stated, in response to the demand, that plaintiff would be' lucky if he got his car back, and that defendant was not bound to get it back for him. This action was brought to recover the value of the car, on the theory that defendant had converted it to its own use. Plaintiff had a verdict of $918, subsequently reduced by the trial court to $700. Plaintiff consented to the reduction. Defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, and appeals from the denial of its blended motion.
A bailor is not limited to a recovery in an action in the form of assumpsit or on the case, if the bailee has actually converted the property to his own use. In Davis v. Tribune Job Printing Co. supra, the right of the bailor to sue for conversion was not questioned and it was recognized in Lebens v. Wolf, 138 Minn. 435, 165 N. W. 276, L.R.A. 1918C, 868. The evidence is ample to sustain a verdict that there was a conversion of plaintiff’s car. There was the exercise of dominion over it inconsistent with his rights, and acts were done which practically destroyed it. These acts constituted a conversion. Merz v. Croxen, 102 Minn. 69, 112 N. W. 890; Brandenburg v. N. W. Jobbers Credit Bureau, 128 Minn. 411, 151 N. W. 134, L.R.A. 1915D, 474.
The order appealed from is affirmed.