4 Barb. 361 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
The defendant, upon this appeal,» objects that the action was in assumpsit, and that the plaintiff did not by his proof make a case to entitle him to recover, either1 upon the common counts, as for the hops sold and delivered, or upon a contract of bailment; and that the declaration did not authorize a recovery as for a conversion of the property. There is no ground upon which the defendant can be charged in this action in the name of the present plaintiff, upon the Contract of bailment made with Hurlbut. (Suydam v. Smith, 7 Hill, 182.) And there is no evidence to charge the defendant, as bailee, upon a contract with, the plaintiff. No point appears to have been made at the trial of the cause below, and none was made in the written points furnished the court upon the argument, that for a tortious conversion of the property by the defendant no recovery could be had in this action. And it is well settled that a position not taken in the inferior court cannot be taken and relied upon, for a reversal of the judgment, in the court of review. The'cause was evidently tried upon the assumption
The questions upon this branch of the case are all presented by the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, and the decision of the court thereon. The grounds of the motion are stated, and they assume that if a conversion was proved the plaintiff was entitled to recover. The declaration was treated (but as I think erroneously) as consisting of three parts or counts, as 1, in assumpsit generally; 2, upon all the common counts; and 3, upon the facts stated, that is, the delivery of the hops by Hurlbut to the defendant as a warehouseman in store, the purchase of them by the plaintiff, and the refusal of the defendant to deliver them. And the reasons assigned by the defendant for his motion point directly to each of these parts, and assume the last count or statement to be good as a declaration in trover or upon the contract of bailment, if the plaintiff could recover in his own name upon such contract. The reasons are, (1.) Because the plaintiff had failed to show any contract of bailment between him and the defendant, and because the action could not be maintained in his name. (2.) Because there was no privity of contract between the plaintiff and defendant. These reasons each point to what was assumed to be the third or last division or count of the declaration, treating it as upon the contract of bailment. (3.) Because, on the proof given, the plaintiff could not recover on his declaration in assumpsit. This has reference solely to what the defendant assumed to be an entire count in the declaration, and to be in assumpsit generally, and does not assert, directly or by implication, that the whole declaration is in assumpsit, and that therefore the plaintiff cannot recover. (4.) Because the plaintiff could not recover on the common counts, having reference to the second part of the declaration. (5.) Because the plaintiff had failed to show sufficient negligence in the defendant to entitle him to recover. (6.) Because no actual conversion of the hops by the defendant had been shown. The last two grounds clearly assume that
Technical pleadings in justices’ courts have been discountenanced, for very obvious reasons, and great liberality has been extended to them whenever they have been brought in review, whether upon appeal or writ of error. And they have been uniformly construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties. The first question in all cases in which an issue of fact has been joined without objection to the pleadings, is whether the statements of the parties, which have taken the place of formal pleadings, have performed the object of pleadings in all courts. That is, whether they have informed the adverse party of the true cause of complaint, or matter of defence, so that they can go to trial understandingly and without danger of surprise: 2d. What is the fair import of the pleading, construed with reference to the known legal principles at which
The other questions in the cause arise upon exceptions to the charge of the court to the jury.
The judge charged the jury that if they believed the hops had been by negligence or mistake delivered to Newbury or any one else but the true owner, it was a conversion by the defendant ; thus submitting to them the question whether the loss of the hops was occasioned by the negligent or mistaken act of the defendant; and by their verdict they have found that fact in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant might have asked the court to charge the jury to inquire whether the hops had not been lost by the mere omission of the defendant, and that in that case the defendant was not liable as for a conversion of the property, but simply upon his contract of bailment; and the court would have been bound so to charge. (Hawkins v. Hoffman, 6 Hill, 588.) But that request was not made, and the fact which the jury were to find in favor of the plaintiff, to charge the defendant as for a conversion, was an affirmative and positive act of the defendant, viz. the delivery by him of the hops to some person other than the true owner. And such actual delivery by the defendant, either through negligence or mistake, would, according to well settled principles, be a legal conversion of th.e goods by him, and the court properly so charged. (Hawkins v. Hoffman, per Bronson, J. supra. Story on Bailments, § 450.) The cause might have been submitted to the jury with instructions much more favorable to the plaintiff upon the facts proved, to wit, that the plaintiff having proved a demand of the property of the defendant, and a refusal by him to deliver it, the onus was upon him to show that it was lost without fault or gross neglect on his part. And in the entire absence of proof as to the manner or cause of the loss, or even that the property was not still in the possession of the de
The rule adopted by the judge as to the measure of damages was the correct rule, even if there had been proof that the value of the hops was different at different times. The conversion must be taken to be at the time of the demand and refusal to deliver; as there is no evidence of a conversion at any other time, and the plaintiff has a right to recover the value at that time, with interest; (Dillenback v. Jerome, 7 Cowen, 295 ;) or the highest price between that time and the time of the trial. (West v. Wentworth, 3 Cowen, 82.) But there was no evidence that the value of the hops was less at any time than at the time of the conversion; so that a charge from the court according to the request of the defendant, in that respect, could not have changed the result, or affected the verdict.
The judgment of the county court should be affirmed, with costs.