3 S.D. 281 | S.D. | 1892
This was an action to recover specific personal property, originally commenced against All. H. De Witt and N. T. Davis. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, and defendant De Witt appeals. The plaintiff alleged in his original complaint that he was the owner and entitled to' the immediate possession of the personal property described in the complaint, and that the possession thereof was wrongfully and unlawfully detained from him by said defendants. A demand and refusal was also alleged, and
It will be noticed that the action was originally commenced upon the theory that both of the defendants were in possession of the property, and wrongfully and unlawfully detained the same from the plaintiff. And it will be further noticed that by the fifth finding of fact the referee found that the defendant All. EL De Witt was neither in possession when the action was commenced, nor at
The learned counsel for the respondent controvert both these propositions. As to the first, they insist that the plaintiff could have recovered the value of the property against the defendant All. H. De Witt, upon the original complaint, without any amendment, as De Witt, having taken the property, in connection with his codefendant, Davis, wrongfully and by force, from the possession of the plaintiff, was liable for the value of it, the same as he would have been liable for the return of it, had it been in his possession at the time of the commencement of the action; and that, the property having been taken by force, the right of plaintiff to recover the value did not depend upon the retaining possession to the time of the commencement of the action.
As to the second proposition, they insist that no new cause of action was added to the complaint by the amendment, as the action after the amendment was for the possession of the property, or its value, if a return could not be had, and that the object both of the original and the amended complaints was the recovery of the property, or the value thereof. The counsel for the respondent seem to have proceeded, in taking judgment against De Witt, upon the theory that while they might be precluded, by the fifth finding of the referee, from taking judgment against him for the possession of the property, they might do so for the value, under the third finding; and the amendment to the complaint seems to have been
The case of Moses v. Morris, 20 Kan. 208, is quite analogous to the case at bar, as in that case there was a special finding of fact by the jury, as follows: “Question. Did G. M. Moses, as sheriff of Barton county, have the property in controversy in his possession at the commencement of the action? Answer. No.”
Mr. Cobbey, in his recent work on the Law of Replevin, states the law upon this subject as follows. In section 61 he says: “To enable plaintiff to maintain an action for the recovery of specific personal property, the defendant must be in possession thereof at the commencement of the action. Where the petition alleges that the defendant is in possession, and the proof shows the contrary, there is such a variance between the allegations and the proof as disables plaintiff from recovering.” Again, in section 64, he says: ‘Replevin will not lie against one who is not detaining the property when the writ is sued out. It is the condition of
It will be observed that the learned author makes no distinction between the case of property unlawfully detained, which could only be recovered in the old common-law action of detinue, and the case of property wrongfully taken and unlawfully detained, that could be recovered in the old common-law action of replevin. As the object of both actions at common law was the recovery of specific personal property unlawfully detained, and the gist of the action was the unlawful detention of the same, when the forms of pleadings were abolished under the Code system, the common-law distinction between the two actions was necessarily abolished also. It is quite immaterial, therefore, under the Code, how the defendant acquired the possession of the property sought to be recovered, so far as the action to recover the property is concerned. Our Code of Civil Procedure contains provisions governing the action for the recovery of specific personal property unlawfully detained, when an immediate delivery is claimed by the plaintiff, (sections 4972-4983;) and the form of the verdict (section 5063) and judgment (section 5099) are given. But these provisions do not recognize any distinction between an action for the wrongful taking and unlawful detention, simply. The evident design of the lawmakers was that this action should take the place of and be substituted for the old actions of replevin and detinue. The action under the Code is based upon plaintiff’s right to the possession and the unlawful detention by the defendant. This is made quite clear from the facts required to be stated in the affidavit for the immediate delivery of the property, if an immediate delivery is claimed. The affidavit required seems to be the same in all cases, and must contain the statement that the property “is wrongfully