Cadwell v. Pray

49 N.W. 150, 86 Mich. 266, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 918
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 N.W. 150 (Cadwell v. Pray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cadwell v. Pray, 49 N.W. 150, 86 Mich. 266, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 918 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The plaintiff sued the defendants jointly for the conversion of certain goods, and recovered judgment, in the circuit court for the county of Ingham.

The suit grows out of the litigation in the case of Pray v. Cadwell, 50 Mich. 222.

The undisputed facts leading up to the j>resent controversy are briefly as follows: In April, 1878, Orman 0. Pray held a note and chattel mortgage against Marvin S. Cadwell, upon which the sum of $600 was due. The note and mortgage were originally given by Cadwell to the defendant John A. Barrington, who had guaranteed the collection of the same to Pray. A day or two before the maturity of this note, Marvin S. Cadwell sold his entire stock of goods, which were covered' by the mortgage, to his brother, Warren W. Cad-well. Barrington, in the interest of Pray, demanded payment of the note of Marvin S. Cadwell, which was refused; and Warren W. Cadwell refused to surrender the goods, or permit them to be taken upon the mortgage. Pray thereupon replevied the entire stock of goods, which was the suit settled by this Court in Pray v. Cadwell, supra. The opinion of the Supreme Court was filed February 27, 1883. In the meantime Pray sold enough [268]*268of the goods under and by virtue of the chattel mortgage to satisfy the debt secured by the same. The goods not sold he boxed up, and stored them in the same building where they were when taken, in the village of Eureka, Clinton county.' The goods remained where placed until the summer of 1883, when they were removed to a small barn. In 1884, by the direction of Orman 0. Pray, these goods were shipped to Petoskey, Mich., and there disposed of by him.

This act of Pray was admitted to be a conversion of the goods, as far as he was concerned; but the defense was that Barrington had never converted the goods or meddled with them in any way so as to- render him liable in this action.

The plaintiff claimed and introduced evidence tending to show that in September, 1880, Warren W. Cadwell assigned his interest in the lawsuit between Pray and Cad-well and the goods to him; that on the 28th day of February, 1883, the next day after the opinion of the Supreme Court was filed in that suit, he sent one S. L. Cook and Arthur Morse, of Lansing, with a team and wagon to Eureka for the goods, with full authority on the part of Cook to demand and receive the goods. It was understood by Cadwell that the goods were in the possession of the defendant Barrington, and the demand by Cook was made to him. Cook testifies, and is corroborated by Morse, that Barrington said he had the possession of the goods, but he would not give them up, except upon a writ of replevin. He refused to tell where they were. In November, 1888, before the commencement of this suit, the plaintiff went to Barrington, and again demanded the goods. He testifies that Barrington informed him that he had turned them over to Pray. He then went and demanded the goods of Pray, but did not get them. After the demand made by Cook, the [269]*269plaintiff testifies that he assigned his interest in the goods to Anderson Stout, of St. Johns, an attorney, for collection. Mr. Stout, with an officer from St. Johns, went to Eureka, and searched for the goods upon the premises of Barrington, but did not find them. Plaintiff claims that before the beginning of the present suit Stout had reassigned the goods to him.

The defendants introduced testimony tending to show that, soon after the boxing up of the unsold goods by Pray, Mr. Walbridge, his attorney, notified Warren W. Cadwell, in the jaresence of the plaintiff, at Stout’s office, in the village of St. Johns, of the disposition he had made of the goods, and served a written notice upon him to the effect that the goods were subject to the order of the Oadwells at any time .they saw fit to take them. Walbridge testified that he served this written notice upon both of the Oadwells, and that Warren tore his notice up, and stamped upon the pieces, saying he would have the whole of the goods or none. The plaintiff has no recollection of any such occurrence.

Barrington testified that he had nothing to do with the goods after they were taken by Pray upon the mortgage in the replevin suit of Pray v. Oadwell. He admitted tha» he demanded pay upon the note, and for the reason that he was interested in its collection by reason of his guaranty, and that he employed an attorney to assist in trying the replevin suit of Pray v. Cadwell. He admitted that Cook demanded the goods of him for plaintiff in 1883, but denied that he had any possession or control of the goods at that time, or that he told Cook that he had; «yet on his direct examination he testified that he told Cook, in substance, that .he did not feel safe in giving the goods over to Cadwell; that he thought Pray had the better right to them, and Pray would hold him responsible for them; and that he knew [270]*270where the goods were. On cross-examination, he further testified that he told Cook he had the goods, and would not let him have them.

It is evident from the whole testimony that, in his talk with Cook, Barrington led' him to believe that he had possession or control of the goods, and refused to deliver them up. This was sufficient to justify the court in charging the jury as he did, in substance, that, if Barrington in this interview admitted that he had the goods in his possession and under his control, and refused to deliver them up, and the plaintiff acted upon such demand, admission, and refusal in bringing this suit, and was thereby induced to incur the expense of litigation in this case, Barrington was estopped from now claiming and asserting in defense that he did not, at that time, have possession and control of the goods.

Error is assigned because the court permitted the plaintiff to state the inception of the note and mortgage, the institution of the replevin suit of Pray against Oadwell, the demand made by Barrington for the payment of the note, and other matters leading up to the controversy out of which his claim against the defendants arose, being matters, as we think, of the history of the present case, and unobjectionable. There was nothing in the testimony calculated to prejudice the defendants’ case, except, perhaps, the fact that Barrington demanded payment of the note while Pray owned it, and before the beginning of the replevin suit, and this fact was material and competent.

Error is also assigned upon the admission of three exhibits. One was dated September* 27, 1880, in which Warren W. Cadwell assigned to plaintiff all his right, title, and interest in the suit in which Pray was plaintiff and Warren W. Cadwell was defendant, upon the condition that plaintiff should pay all the costs in the suit [271]*271and the attorney fees of Stout and Strickland. Another was an assignment from Warren to plaintiff of all his right, title, and interest in the goods taken upon the writ of replevin in the same suit (Pray v. Cadwell), and reciting that this transfer was made for the purpose of more fully specifying the conditions of the sale made in the first exhibit of September 27, 1880, which was meant and understood to be an assignment of his interest in the .goods. This last assignment was dated January 16, 1889. We think these exhibits were admissible.

Testimony of plaintiff was permitted, against objection, ■that the understanding was that the assignment of September 27, 1880, conveyed the title of Warren in the goods to plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.W. 150, 86 Mich. 266, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cadwell-v-pray-mich-1891.