ATLAS HOTEL SUPPLY COMPANY v. Baney

543 P.2d 289, 273 Or. 731, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 372
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 543 P.2d 289 (ATLAS HOTEL SUPPLY COMPANY v. Baney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ATLAS HOTEL SUPPLY COMPANY v. Baney, 543 P.2d 289, 273 Or. 731, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 372 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the trial court, sitting without a jury, awarding plaintiff $75,-000 damages for conversion of restaurant equipment. The judgment is against defendants Curtis Baney, Attilio Marastoni and William Jacobson.

*734 These defendants assign as error the holding that no demand was required in order to constitute a conversion under the facts of this case; that defendant Curtis Baney was a joint tortfeasor, and contend that in its award of $75,000 the court applied the wrong measure of damages. Plaintiff cross-appeals from the failure of the trial court to grant judgment against defendants Myrtle Baney and Julia Marastoni.

The facts.

This being an appeal in an action at law from findings and judgment in favor of the plaintiff, we must view the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, despite contradictory evidence offered by defendants. Hassan v. Guyer, 271 Or 349, 532 P2d 227 (1975).

Plaintiff is. engaged in the restaurant supply business, including design, engineering work and installation of all equipment and supplies, both large and small, as required for the operation of a restaurant. In February 1970 plaintiff completed such an operation for the Eddie Mays restaurant in Bend. It then entered into an “equipment lease” agreement with Eddie Mays Company for a total rent of $168,348, payable in monthly “installments.” Plaintiff assigned its interest in that agreement to Leasing Service Corporation.

Eddie Mays Company was also obligated on a real estate mortgage on which it defaulted in late 1971. It also defaulted on payments due under the equipment lease agreement. The mortgage on the real property was then foreclosed “subject to the prior and superior interests of defendant Leasing Service Corporation as owner of said personal property * * Meanwhile, that corporation exercised its contract right to have plaintiff assume performance of the equipment lease agreement and in January *735 1972 plaintiff commenced making the contract monthly payments of $2,805.80 to that corporation and continued to do so up to the time of trial in December 1974.

Defendants Baney, as husband and wife, owned a motel adjacent to the restaurant and were interested in the operation of the restaurant “to enhance the motel operation.” On March 20, 1972, prior to the foreclosure sale, they entered into, a contract with the mortgagee to purchase the restaurant real property. That contract provided that “prior to closing” they should “arrive at a settlement with Leasing Service Corporation and/or [plaintiff] with respect to the personal property on the premises leased therefrom * * * ”

Meanwhile, defendant Curtis Baney talked to plaintiff about the possible purchase of the restaurant equipment owned by it. His purpose was to- “put the whole package together for a whole restaurant,” and that included his purchase of plaintiff’s restaurant equipment, as well as the real property.

At about the same time defendant Curtis Baney undertook negotiations with defendant Attilio Marastoni as a possible operator of the restaurant. On February 3, 1972, defendants Marastoni and Jacobson (both husbands and wives) filed with the Oregon Liquor Control Commission an application for a retail liquor license for the premises and on March 1, 1972, defendants Baney entered into a lease agreement with defendants Marastoni and Jacobson for the real property “together with all of the equipment located therein.” Defendants testified that this reference to the equipment was a mistake and was not intended to include plaintiff’s equipment.

*736 Defendant Attilio Marastoni then went npon the premises and undertook painting and equipment repairs in anticipation of opening the restaurant npon approval of the application for a liquor license. During that same period, defendant Curtis Baney negotiated with plaintiff for purchase of its restaurant equipment. Those negotiations were unsuccessful.

On May 3, 1972, the liquor license was granted and on May 6, 1972, defendants Marastoni and Jacobson opened the restaurant for operation with the consent of defendant Curtis Baney. Plaintiff, however, had not consented to the use of its equipment and on May 9, 1972, notified defendants that it considered the use of the equipment to constitute conversion.

Since then defendants Marastoni and Jacobson have remained in possession and control of the restaurant equipment and have used it in their restaurant operation until the trial of this case, without payment to plaintiff, but in the hope of negotiating a purchase of the equipment. Negotiations in an attempt to agree upon a purchase price continued until September 1972. During that period no demand was made by plaintiff for return of the equipment, but on September 7, 1972, defendant made a demand upon plaintiff to remove the equipment or accept $60,000 for it. Plaintiff then filed this action.

1. The trial court did not err in holding that no demand for return of the equipment was necessary to entitle plaintiff to bring an action for conversion.

Defendants contend that defendants Baney were lawfully in possession of the restaurant real property by their purchase of that property; that they then became involuntary bailees of plaintiff’s equipment; that they could have required plaintiff to remove its equipment; that plaintiff chose not to do so and that under these facts there could be no conversion of the *737 equipment until plaintiff made a demand for its return, followed by a refusal to respond to that demand. In support of this position defendants cite Jeffries v. Pankow, 112 Or 439, 223 P 745, 229 P 903 (1924); Lee Tung v. Burkhart, 59 Or 194, 116 P 1066 (1911); Bliss v. Southern Pacific Co. et al, 212 Or 634, 321 P2d 324 (1958); Davis v. American National Bank of Denver, 149 Colo 34, 367 P2d 325 (1961); and Restatement of Torts 2d § 237 (1965).

In support of this position defendants also refer to testimony by plaintiff’s president to the effect that no demand was made for return of the equipment because of negotiations for its purchase, -which was still pending when the restaurant was reopened; that he assumed that the equipment would be used in the operation of the restaurant by the buyer of the equipment and hoped to sell the equipment “in place,” but did not acquiesce in the use of the equipment and within two or three days after the reopening of the restaurant “wrote a letter” which notified defendants that plaintiff considered their use of the equipment to constitute a conversion of it.

Assuming, however, that defendants Baney became involuntary bailees of plaintiff’s equipment when they purchased the real property on which it was located, that fact did not give them, the right to use the equipment, much less the right to deliver it to a third party.

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Bluebook (online)
543 P.2d 289, 273 Or. 731, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-hotel-supply-company-v-baney-or-1975.