Cannon v. Northside Transfer Co., Inc.

427 N.E.2d 712, 1981 Ind. App. LEXIS 1709
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 3, 1981
Docket2-1079A323
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 427 N.E.2d 712 (Cannon v. Northside Transfer Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon v. Northside Transfer Co., Inc., 427 N.E.2d 712, 1981 Ind. App. LEXIS 1709 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, Judge.

Appellant-Plaintiff Charlet Cannon (Mrs. Cannon) presents one issue for review:

Whether the trial court erred by awarding her only one dollar in nominal damages in a wrongful detention action against Appellee, defendant below.

We reverse and remand.

Mrs. Cannon’s landlord brought an action in the Washington Township Small Claims Court against her for overdue rent and eviction. The landlord obtained a Writ of Restitution and the constable and Appellee, Northside Transfer Company, Inc. (North-side) arrived at Mrs. Cannon’s apartment to evict her and remove her furniture. Mrs. Cannon asked permission to move her own furniture, but her request was refused. The next day Mrs. Cannon tendered payment to Northside for the moving costs and accrued storage cost. Northside would neither accept the money nor return her furniture.

For eleven months Mrs. Cannon and her four children lived with no furnishings. They were forced to 1) eat standing up or sitting on steps, 2) sleep on the floor, 3) go to the laundromat, because Northside was withholding her washer and dryer, and 4) suffer from the heat during the summer, because Northside was withholding her air conditioner. Mrs. Cannon finally brought a wrongful detention action against North- *714 side during which she received her furniture pursuant to a Pre-Judgment Order for Possession. The trial court rendered judgment for Mrs. Cannon, but awarded her only one dollar in nominal damages.

Prior to addressing the merits, we direct our attention to Northside’s Motion to Dismiss, included in its appellate brief, which alleges:

I. That Mrs. Cannon has presented no authenticated record from the trial court upon which to base her appeal;
II. That Mrs. Cannon did not meet the jurisdictional requirements of timely brief filing and presenting the record;
III. That Mrs. Cannon’s statements of the issue, case, and facts in her appellate brief are neither accurate nor adequate to meet the requirements for these portions of an appellant’s brief;
IV. That I.C. 34-1-47-1 (Burns Code Ed. 1973):
a. precludes Mrs. Cannon from appealing from an action originating in Small Claims Court, and
b. precludes Mrs. Cannon, prevailing below, from appealing from a judgment whose benefits she has accepted.

I.

Northside argues that there is no showing that the record itself was provably filed in the trial court: 1) the record and the transcript of the evidence do not show the Clerk’s file marks, 2) there is no order book entry certifying the filing with the Clerk, and 3) the Clerk’s certificate does not show the filing was done on any particular date.

Mrs. Cannon has presented us with a record containing a transcript of the evidence properly certified by both the court reporter and the trial judge. The entire record of proceedings concludes with the Clerk’s certificate, certifying all papers and entries in the cause and stating that the “original Bill of Exceptions (sic) [transcript of the evidence] is incorporated.” We are satisfied that the record was authentically filed.

II.

Northside argues that Mrs. Cannon had no excuse for failing to meet the jurisdictional filing requirements of timely brief filing and presenting the record. Ind. Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rules 3(B) and 8.1(A). This Court in accordance with Ind. Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rule 14, had granted Mrs. Cannon extensions of time which she met. Northside should have raised any objections when the petitions for extension of time were filed.

III.

Northside argues that Mrs. Cannon’s statement of the issue, case and facts is inaccurate and inadequate. Northside was free to reformulate the issue and offer its own statements of the case and facts pursuant to Ind. Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rule 8.3(B).

IV.

Northside’s argument based on I.C. 34-1-47-1 is two-pronged:

a.

First, Northside argues that I.C. 34-1-47-1 proscribes appeals from “actions originating before a justice of the peace” and that the Small Claims Court is successor to justice of the peace courts. North-side apparently considers that Mrs. Cannon’s appeal is a continuation of an action originating in Small Claims Court. It is not. Her appeal is from an action for wrongful detention filed in Superior Court. Mrs. Cannon’s wrongful detention action is a separate and distinct action from the one brought against her in Small Claims Court by her landlord for overdue rent and eviction. Northside’s argument has no merit.

b.

Secondly, relying upon the portion of I.C. 34-1-47-1 which provides: “The party obtaining a judgment shall not take an appeal after receiving any money paid or collected thereon,” Northside argues that Mrs. Cannon cannot appeal from the judg *715 ment, the benefits of which she has accepted. The trial court awarded her one dollar in nominal damages and she received her furniture on a Pre-Judgment Possession Order.

Nothing in the record indicates that Mrs. Cannon has accepted the one dollar. The Pre-Judgment Possession Order was an interlocutory order, not a final judgment, and thus the receipt of her furniture was not a benefit of a final judgment. Moreover, Mrs. Cannon had a duty to mitigate her damages by recovering her furniture. City of East Chicago v. Pitzer (1949) 227 Ind. 241, 84 N.E.2d 588; Indiana Pipe Line Co. v. Christensen (1924) 195 Ind. 106, 143 N.E. 596.

Northside’s Motion to Dismiss is denied.

We now turn to the main issue:

Whether Mrs. Cannon is entitled to more than nominal damages for the wrongful detention of her furniture.

On appeal Northside argues that it had a lien against Mrs. Cannon’s furniture. By its judgment for Mrs. Cannon the trial court necessarily determined that Northside wrongfully detained her property for at least a portion of the period between the refusal of her tendered payment and the return of her property pursuant to the prejudgment order. By its judgment for Mrs. Cannon on Northside’s Supplemental Cross Complaint the trial court necessarily determined that Northside did not have a valid lien upon the furniture.

The evidence fully supports a reasonable determination that even assuming rightful eviction of Cannon and consequent rightful possession of her goods by Northside pursuant to a warehouseman’s lien, such lien was extinguished by refusal of Cannon’s tendered payment. I.C. 26-1-7-209(4).

Mrs. Cannon contends that she is entitled to more than nominal damages for the loss of use of her furniture for the eleven months during which Northside wrongfully withheld her property, i. e., converted her property. The measure of damages allowable in conversion is generally the fair market value of the converted property at the time of the conversion. Yoder Feed Service v. Allied Pullets, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
427 N.E.2d 712, 1981 Ind. App. LEXIS 1709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-northside-transfer-co-inc-indctapp-1981.