5 Denio 21 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
For the purpose of this suit the plaintiff is to be deemed the owner of the boat in question, as that is one of the propositions of factcontained in the statement of the counsel on opening the cause to the jury. This boat has been the subject of a former legal controversy between these same parties and another, in an action of replevin brought by the present defendants, against the present plaintiff and one Lighthall. Upon the commencement of that suit, the boat was delivered by the proper officer to the plaintiffs, who are defendants in this suit. Those parties having possession by virtue of the writ and the provisions of the statute, their possession was lawful. Both the writ and the delaration in the replevin suit were in the detinet only, that is, the plaintiffs therein did not complain that the defendants therein lawfully took the boat, but only that they lawfully detained it from the plaintiffs when they were legally bound to deliver it to them. The action of replevin in the detinet was very seldom used until it was made applicable to a variety of cases by our statutes, and form was given to its proceedings. (2 R. S. 521, tit. Of the Action of Replevin.) To the declaration in replevin the defendants pleaded simply the general issue, non-detinet. This plea put in issue, not only the detention of the boat, but also the property of the plaintiffs in that suit in it. (2 R. S. 529, § 40.) If the defendants in that suit had claimed title to the boat, and had wished to obtain a judgment for the return of it or for its value in damages, they might have ploaded such title, oi given
The plaintiffs, notwithstanding the verdict that they were not the owners of the boat, still remained in the possession of it. The plaintiff in this suit, who is the true owner, demands the boat of the defendants in this suit, who were plaintiffs in the former suit, and the possession is refused.
Upon such a title and after demand and refusal he brings this
The plaintiff here cannot bring another replevin, (2 R. S. 532, § 62,) and he has no remedy upon the replevin bond which was taken upon the transfer of the possession to the defendants, the conditon of which was to return the boat, if return should be adjudged, and to pay such sums of money as might be recovered against the plaintiffs. (2 R. S. 523, § 7, sub. 2.) Here has been no return adjudged; no sums of money recovered except costs ; no judgment for the restoration of the boat or the payment of its value. All the defence which the defendants have to this action, upon the case made by the bill of exceptions, arises not out of any merits of their own, but out of the demerits, negligence or omission of the plaintiff. The law discountenances and discourages a multiplicity of suits, and in many cases requires that all subjects of controversy which can be disposed of in a single suit, shall be so disposed of, or the party be precluded from presenting such subject matter for adjudication in a new suit. Hence an account for goods sold has been held to be an entire demand, incapable of being split up for the purposes of bringing several suits thereon. (Guernsey v. Carver, 8 Wend. 492; Colvin v. Corwin, 15 id. 557.) So where a party has several demands or existing causes of ac-' tion growing out of the same contract, or resting in matter of account which may be joined and sued for in the same action, they must be joined. And where there are several covenants in the same instrument, of which there has been several breaches, distinct suits cannot, be brought for the several breaches; but all the breaches of the several covenants which have accrued at the time of commencing the suit must be embraced in the same action. The same rule is held to extend to several actions against the same person for the same wrong. (Bendernagle v. Cocks, 19 Wend. 207. See also Farrington v. Payne, 15 John. 432; Smith v. Jones, id. 229 ; Sill v. Rood
It is the principle contained in the class of decisions to which we have just referred that the defendants evoke and claim as a protection against a recovery in this suit. They insist that as
If the claim of title in a replevin suit is looked upon as a mere matter of defence in such suits, then the defendants are right, and they are protected from a recovery in this suit by the precise principle established in the case of Le Guen v. Gouverneur. If such claim of title is not looked upon as mere matter of defence, but if because the defendant in such suit might plead title, he therefore must plead title therein or be forever after silent as to his title, as hinted at in Bendernagle v. Cocks, (sup.) then are the defendants still right, and may retain the property though the plaintiff is the real owner.
The principle laid down by Kent, J. relates to the defence of a suit and the omission of a means of defence which a party had in his power, by which a recovery is had against him. Here, if the defendant in the replevin suit has omitted any proper means of defence; still there has not been any recovery against him, and in this respect the case is not parallel to the one referred to. But it is perhaps proper to waive that consideration, as the principle settled goes to prevent the increase of litigation, and to require that a party should present his claim at the proper time, or be forever barred from presenting it. That rule however related to the defence, and even as to that the case of mutual dealings was remarked as an exception. If in a suit against a party he omits to set off his counter demand, he may do so without barring himself of a recovery in a cross action. The same principle applies to the more modern doctrine of recoupment. In a case proper for recoupment, it is optional with the defendant
The action of replevin is a peculiar action. The plaintiff is privileged beyond plaintiffs in other suits, by the right to have the property which is the subject of controversy delivered to him under the first process issued in the suit. It is, perhaps, to compensate in some measure for this extraordinary privilege that the defendant is suffered to plead title and to have a judgment for the return of the property, or its value in damages, in the same suit, if he establishes his plea by proof, and is not driven to another suit to regain the property or its value. But while the law allows this for the benefit of the defendant, as it would allow of a set-off or recoupment, I cannot find that it compels it more in the first case than it does in the two last. In replevin both parties are said to be actors ; and in fact a replevin with an avowry, cognizance or plea of title, is but two suits going on at the same time, in which both parties are plaintiffs and both parties defendants, and in which a iudgment may be rendered to suit either claim. I cannot find, however, that both parties must necessarily make distinct affirmative claims. I see no reason why the defendant may not confine himself simply to a defence by the general issue, and put the plaintiff to proof of his claim. If in such case the verdict and judgment are against the defendant, particularly on the plea of non-detinet, it will be a bar against any future claim on his part to the property under a prior title. It will be a bar because such plea puts in issue the plaintiff’s title to the property, and á verdict in his favor tvould establish his
But it is said on the part of the defendants that the boat was delivered to them by virtue of the writ of replevin, and that their possession was a lawful one; and it is asked if the action could be maintained against them during the pendency of the
I will not insist that all this doctrine applies to cases of replevin for property distrained for rent, or damage feasant, because in such cases the party replevying has a former title, subject only to the lien for rent or damage done. But this doctrine does seem to me to apply to all cases where the right of possession of the chattel replevied has no other foundation besides that w'hich results from the writ of replevin.
It is further urged by the defendants here, that the plaintiff in replevin acquires title to the chattel by virtue of the writ, bo that he can dispose of it, and that his bond stands to the defendant in the place of the property. To a certain extent this may be true in cases of distress for rent and damage feasant. In such cases the plaintiff in replevin acquires possession by virtue of the writ, and he had title before, and thus possession and title meet; and his bond is conditioned to pay the rent or damage which was a charge upon the chattel. A mere bond of replevin cannot confer title. If it can do so, these defendants have title to this boat. If the boat was now in the possession of the plaintiff in this suit, could these defendants recover it from such possession in an action of trover ? What evidence could they produce of their title 1 A record showing a writ of replevin, by virtue of which the possession was delivered to them, and a verdict and judgment on such record that they had no title. Such record, so far from proving anj title in the defendants, would prove that they had a right to the possession of the boat during the pendency of the suit, but that they had failed to establish the title under which
The plaintiff is the true owner and may resume the possession. As the original possession of the defendants was Iawful a demand and refusal was necessaiy to show a conversion This wras done, and all the steps necessary to the plaintiff to maintain his action were complete. In any aspect in which I can view the case, which it must be confessed is a nice and interesting one, my judgment turns to the same point, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover on his opening, and hence that the circuit judge erred in nonsuiting him.
New trial granted.