Gregory v. Padilla

379 P.2d 951, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 134
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1963
Docket238
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 379 P.2d 951 (Gregory v. Padilla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory v. Padilla, 379 P.2d 951, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 134 (Ala. 1963).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

This is an action in claim and delivery brought by the plaintiff Padilla against the defendant Gregory to recover possession of certain personal property consisting of equipment used by the plaintiff as a mechanic in the repair of automobiles.

The plaintiff alleged that the property was being wrongfully detained and used by the defendant and prayed judgment for its return, or $4,000 as the value thereof, and $5,000 in damages for its retention. The defendant did not deny that the plaintiff was the owner of all the equipment in question, but denied the remainder of the plaintiff’s allegations and made a counterclaim for sums owed him by the plaintiff, -totalling $1,000. Immediately after -the commencement of the action ^he plaintiff secured possession of much of his equipment by virtue of an undertaking for claim and delivery. From a verdict and *953 judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

At the close of the plaintiff's evidence, the defendant moved for a directed verdict on the ground that plaintiff had failed to establish a prima facie case on the issue of damages. He argued to the trial court that the true measure of damages for the items of equipment, which were never recovered by the plaintiff, was their fair market value, whereas the plaintiff had offered only evidence of replacement value. In like manner the defendant contended that the true measure of damages for the loss of use by the plaintiff of the items recovered was the net usable market value and not the “purely speculative” values testified to by the plaintiff. The court’s action in denying the motion is the first error specified by the defendant.

The plaintiff alone testified as to values. On cross examination, he stated that the values he placed upon a few of the items were replacement values, but many others were below replacement value and in one case the actual value was more than the replacement value. This equipment was all familiar to the plaintiff as he had purchased it himself and was using it in his trade in the Anchorage area. Before giving his own opinion as to the reasonable daily rental value of each item, the plaintiff explained that many of the items were not available at Anchorage for rental on an individual basis but could only be had by renting an entire shop equipped with the 'items needed. 1

The defendant interposed no objection to any of this value testimony. That fact alone would have precluded him from challenging the competency of the evidence on the motion for a directed verdict or on appeal. Incompetent testimony, which is otherwise relevant as this was, admitted without objection, has the force and effect of competent evidence. 2 And this evidence was not only competent, it was also sufficient to preclude the granting of a directed verdict on the question of damages. 3

Furthermore, as owner of the equipment, the plaintiff was qualified to express an opinion at least as to the value of the property, if not as to its use value, the rule being that an owner’s opinion of the value of his property is competent even though it may not be 1 very persuasive. 4 Under the circumstances the court did not err in denying the motion for a directed verdict.

Shortly before the plaintiff finished testifying in chief, the court admitted into evidence, over objection by defendant, a document marked “Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5.” This was an inventory prepared by the plaintiff on December 8, 1959 (about a year before the controversy resulting in this law suit arose) of various items of equipment purchased by him for use in his trade. It included not only the items listed in the complaint but others not here involved. *954 Opposite each item appeared the valuation placed thereon. The plaintiff testified that these values were taken from inventories furnished him by the parties from whom he purchased the items in 1958, and that they are the same as the values alleged in this action. The prior inventories from which exhibit 5 was prepared were no longer in existence at the time of the trial.

As grounds for his objection to the admission of exhibit 5, the defendant stated to the trial court:

The document is self serving * * * it is in contradiction to what the plaintiff has testified to heretofore, and that it contains items that are not included in the action for claim and delivery.

Upon cross-examination the plaintiff admitted exhibit 5 was prepared by him from inventory lists given to him by the prior owners of the equipment. Thereupon the defendant moved that the exhibit be stricken for the reasons that “it’s not the best evidence, it’s self-serving, it’s made up from .other documents not in evidence that would be the best' evidence.” The motion was denied.

While the defendant specifies as prejudicial error the admission of exhibit 5 into evidence on the grounds that it was “at best a self-serving statement, based on hearsay, contradictory to the appellee’s [plaintiff’s] prior testimony and not the best evidence,” in his brief he does not seem to place any reliance upon the claim that exhibit 5 was contrary to the plaintiff’s prior testimony. He cites us to no authority in support of this specification of error, nor does he show how he was prejudiced by the admission of the document.

A declaration can be said to be self-serving only if it had that characteristic at the time it was made, 5 the purpose of the rule excluding self-serving declarations being to prevent the manufacturing of evidence. 6 So, a statement, oral or written, made by a party at a time when no motive to misrepresent existed, would not be inadmissible as a self-serving declaration. 7

Since exhibit 5 was prepared by the plaintiff as an inventory of his equipment, with valuations, on December 8, 1959, and since he had no dealings whatsoever with the defendant concerning the equipment until March, 1960, not to mention the fact that he had no intimation when he prepared the inventory that he would someday be involved in a law suit over that equipment, we find that in keeping with the principles of law above stated it was not error to admit the inventory as evidence in this case. Even if we were to hold that the trial court committed error in receiving the inventory, such error would not have been prejudicial to the defendant because there was other direct evidence as to the same value of items of equipment as .to which the inventory had been admitted. 8

With respect to his statement that exhibit 5 was not the best evidence and was hearsay, the defendant not only failed to cite us to any authority in support of these two propositions or point out wherein he was prejudiced by admission of the document, but he has not even advanced in his brief what could be reasonably taken for an argument such as is called for by Supreme Ct.R. 11(a) (8). 9

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Bluebook (online)
379 P.2d 951, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-padilla-alaska-1963.