Allstate Insurance v. Rossi Auto Body, Inc.

787 A.2d 742, 2000 WL 33115696, 2000 Del. Super. LEXIS 429
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 23, 2000
DocketCiv. A. No. 00C-06-079-JOH
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 787 A.2d 742 (Allstate Insurance v. Rossi Auto Body, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allstate Insurance v. Rossi Auto Body, Inc., 787 A.2d 742, 2000 WL 33115696, 2000 Del. Super. LEXIS 429 (Del. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

HERLIHY, Judge.

Plaintiffs Allstate Insurance Company and Aimee Sann have filed an action in replevin, for declaratory judgment and for damages for automobile repair fraud against defendant Rossi Auto Body, Inc. Sann’s vehicle was involved in an automobile accident. It was towed and ended up with Rossi, which claims it had authority to make certain repairs. Whether it did or how much was authorized is part of the dispute. Apparently, Rossi made some repairs, but later Allstate determined Sann’s vehicle to be totaled. Allstate tendered a check to Rossi for repairs which Rossi said was insufficient. It refused to release Sann’s car and asserted a garagemen’s lien for the amount it contends is owed. This act prompted plaintiffs to file their action, including for replevin.

Rossi, however, points to statutory language which grants exclusive original jurisdiction to the Justice of the Peace Courts over replevin actions in all garagemen’s lien cases. It has moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ replevin action for lack of jurisdiction. Justice of the Peace Courts, however, do not provide for a jury trial for such replev-in actions. The plaintiffs argue that this results in the deprivation of their right to a jury trial protected by the Delaware Constitution.

This Court holds that granting the Justices of the Peace exclusive jurisdiction over replevin actions in garagemen lien cases where there is no right to a jury trial violates plaintiffs’ right to a jury trial as protected by the Delaware Constitution. Rossi’s motion, therefore, is DENIED.

DISCUSSION

There is a presumption that all statutes are constitutional.1 In addition, courts are historically and justifiably reluctant to declare unconstitutional an act of the General Assembly.2 To understand, therefore, how this Court reached its holding, an analysis of replevin actions and the statutes creating garagemen’s liens is necessary. The confluence of these two analyses in the context of the Delaware Constitution compels this Court’s holding.

A

Delaware common law on replevin was described early in the 19 th century as follows:

The writ of replevin in our practice is not confined to cases of distress, and to the tortious taking of property, but is used wherever one man claims property in the possession of another and prefers proceeding in rem for the purpose of obtaining possession of the specific property, rather than compensation in damages for its loss.
If the defendant, upon making claim of property, does not give the requisite security, the sheriff replevies the goods as if no such claim has been made; delivers them to the plaintiff, and summons the defendant to appear at the return of the writ; and the suit proceeds.
The declaration may be either in the detinet or the detinuit; that is, the plaintiff may allege, as the case may be, that the defendant still detains the property, in which case damages may be recovered for the value of the goods, as well as for the unlawful caption and detention; or he may allege that the [744]*744defendant detained them until the re-plevin was made, when he can recover only damages for the unlawful caption and detention to the time of the replev-in.
Cases not provided for by the act of assembly stand upon the common law. Under the plea of property, the defendant, if it be found for him, is entitled to judgment for the return of the property (pro retorno habendo) and damages for the taking upon the writ.
The property for which the writ was brought in this case is ninety-eight and a half bushels of corn, which is a perishable article, and which ipso usu consumi-tur; and, upon proof made at the trial that the corn had perished or been consumed, the jury might well give a verdict for damages, embracing the value of the corn, of which in such case the defendant could have no return, for that is the principle of the rule as laid down by lord [sic] Hale.3 [Emphasis in original]

In that case, a jury’s award of $45.75 in damages was affirmed.4

Other early Delaware cases show that replevin actions involved jury trials. One is Truax v. Parvis,5 which is a reporting of a jury charge in a replevin action. One of the issues involved venue. After a plaintiffs’ verdict, the defendant appealed. Because the Superior Court judge failed to properly charge the jury on venue, the Court of Errors and Appeals reversed the verdict.6

The case of Maclary v. Turner7 is reported and it, too, is a charge to a jury in a replevin action involving corn and hay. The jury awarded the defendant damages of $239.01 since the property could not be found.8

Even though it came after the adoption of the 1897 Constitution, the case of Hitch v. Riggin9 contains a jury charge by none other than Judge Victor Woolley, author of the two-volume authoritative treatise on Delaware law. In Hitch, he instructed the jury, in part, that:

WOOLLEY, J. (charging the jury).
The issue of property in replevin, notwithstanding a plea by the defendant of property in himself, is not whether the property in the chattel is that of the plaintiff or the defendant, but whether the property is in the plaintiff or claimant in the action and whether the plaintiff as such has a consequent right to its immediate and exclusive possession, regardless of the title and property of the defendant.10

The replevin action in Hitch was to recover a horse. The defendant did not ask for return of the horse but only for a monetary award equal to its value. The jury awarded him $56.33.11

When he published his treatise in 1906, Woolley described various features of re-plevin actions:

[745]*745The writ of replevin is an original •writ. In its nature it is a mixed writ, partly in rem and partly in personam. Essentially it is a proceeding against the property, the summons to the defendant being accessory and subordinate, so far as the frame of the writ is concerned. The writ is entitled, addressed, tested, signed, sealed and made returnable like other original process, and contains a command to the sheriff to cause the goods and chattels mentioned in it, to be replevied and delivered to the plaintiff. It is in the following form:12

The form of which he gave an example was returnable to Superior Court. He continues:

Demurrer, whether general or special, may be filed to a pleading in replevin, for the same causes and under the same principles of pleading as govern demurrers in other forms of action.
When a suit is brought by a joint owner of a chattel for its recovery, and the joint ownership appears in the writ or in the narr, the defendant may demur, or at trial object to the evidence, or call on the court to instruct the jury against recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
787 A.2d 742, 2000 WL 33115696, 2000 Del. Super. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allstate-insurance-v-rossi-auto-body-inc-delsuperct-2000.