Krewson & Co. v. Purdom

11 P. 281, 13 Or. 563, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 56
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 P. 281 (Krewson & Co. v. Purdom) 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
Krewson & Co. v. Purdom, 11 P. 281, 13 Or. 563, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 56 (Or. 1886).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of the county of Douglas, rendered in an action brought by the respondents against the appellants for the conversion of certain cord-wood. The action was in the ordinary form to recover damages for the conversion of personal property. The answer denied all the material allegations of the complaint, and alleged that said cord-wood was the property of Herman and Eobert Aulauff, partners, under the firm name of Aulauff Brothers. The respondents, at the trial, attempted to establish that the wood in question originally belonged [566]*566to some Italians, of whom one John Gotardi was a principal actor; that they constituted a company under the name of Gotardi & Co.; that said company cut the wood on the land of one De Launey, in Douglas County, under the contract to pay De Launey stumpage, at the rate of ten cents a cord; that they subsequently, and on or about the nineteenth day of May, 1883, sold it to the respondents for two dollars and a half a cord, less the price of hauling it to the railroad, and the stumpage; that after said sale by Gotardi & Go. to the respondents, and on or about the twenty-sixth day of May, 1883, the appellant, J. S. Purdom, who was then sheriff of said county of Douglas, by his deputy the appellant, H. C. Slocum, attached the wood by virtue of an attachment issued out of the said Circuit Court in an action wherein I. R. Dawson, assignee of the said Aulauff Brothers, was plaintiff, and certain parties designated as a company, under the name of Maria & Co., were defendants, the said Gotardi being one of the defendants; that said ap-' pellants refused to deliver the wood to the respondents upon demand made by them therefor, and that subsequently it caught fire and mostly burned up. The appellants claimed, and attempted to establish, that the said Aulauff Brothers purchased from Drain & Co. a contract they had with the railroad company to supply it with wood, and then contracted with said Maria & Co. to cut the wood; that said Maria & Co. included all the Italians belonging to the Gotardi company; that said Aulauff Brothers contracted with the said De Launey for the wood upon the place, and paid him the stumpage, and that all the wood was cut by said Maria & Co. for said Aulauff Brothers, and that they paid for the cutting thereof in supplies and money. The respondents maintained that after the Aulauffs made the contract with Maria & Co. to cut wood, Gotardi and his associates, con[567]*567sisting of ten Italians, came to the state and went to work for said Maria & Co.'at a stipulated price, and were not a part of said company; that they continued working for Maria & Co. until about the 20th of February, 1883, and then quit, and went and contracted with said De Launey for wood on his place; agreed to pay him ten cents per cord for stumpage, and cut the wood in question, and that neither Maria & Co. nor Aulauff Brothers had anything to do with the matter; that they got their supplies from Aulauff Brothers while they were cutting said wood, through Maria & Co., and in payment of a debt said Maria & Co. were owing them for the work they did for said company; that on or about the seventh day of May, 1883, they made a contract with the respondents to receive from them supplies, and to let them have the wood; and that about a week before the wood was attached the respondent, J. W. Krewson, went up to De Launey’s place, and Gotardi turned it over to him; that the wood was scattered over the premises where it had been cut; that it was not measured, but estimated to be between five and six hundred cords; that the said J. W. Krewson marked part of the piles “ K. & Co.” The jury returned a verdict for the respondents, and against the appellants, for the sum of $1,050, upon which the judgment appealed from was entered.

A question was raised upon the argument as to whether the allegation in the answer, that the wood was the property of Aulauff Brothers, was new matter of defense, which would be taken as true if not controverted by a reply. There were two amended answers filed in the action, as appears from the transcript, in which said allegation was made, and a reply was filed to the first one denying it, but it does not appear that any reply to the latter one was filed. The respondent’s counsel, however, contended that it was agreed by the counsel in open [568]*568court, when the last amended answer was filed, that the reply to the former one should be deemed a reply to that. Said counsel also filed a motion to expunge from the transcript said latter answer, upon the grounds that no order permitting its filing appears to have been made. The court was not inclined to entertain the motion. It would, however, have permitted counsel to take steps to have the record of the court below corrected if it had deemed it important, but the view I have taken of the question renders it unnecessary.

' In an action for the conversion of personal property, an allegation in the answer that the property belongs to some third person is not, in my opinion, new matter of defense. It only controverts the allegation of ownership contained in the complaint. I am not prepared to say that such fact could be proved, under a formal denial of such allegation, but am satisfied that it only amounts to a traverse, and that proof of it merely disproves the plaintiff’s title to the property, which he is bound to make out in the first instance. The plaintiff must have a general or special title in the property in order to maintain the action. (Dubois v. Harcourt, 20 Wend. 43.) And proof that it was owned and possessed by a third person defeats his right of recovery. It shows that he never had a cause of action; that a material allegation in his complaint is untrue. I do not maintain that a person, having only possession of personal property, cannot recover against a wrong-doer for the conversion of it. Possession is sufiicient evidence of ownership to enable a party to maintain such an action as against one who interferes with it without having any right. In Duncan v. Spear, 11 Id. 54, a purchaser of personal property at a void sale upon execution was held to have sufiicient title to maintain trover against a stranger who converted1 it. And it is claimed that a trespasser can recover against [569]*569one who takes the property from him without having any better right. (6 Waite’s Actions and Defenses, 218.) But I am inclined' to think that possession would not be sufficient to authorize a recovery in such an action, unless it were an actual holding under a claim of right. The law could not consistently permit a party who had obtained possession of personal property in violation of its rules-to recover its value against any one. It is a well-settled principle of law that the satisfaction of a judgment for the conversion of property transfers the title to the defendant in the action. How could such a result follow when the plaintiff had no title — had nothing beyond a tortious possession? The rule in trespass is of course different. In an action of that character, the recovery is-for an injury to the possession, and the fact that the-plaintiff has possession is sufficient to maintiff the action.

Upon the merits of this case as shown by the bill of exceptions, there was but one question, which was this:. For whom was the wood in controversy cut ? If Gotardi & Co. cut the wood under the circumstances testified to-by J. W.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gissel v. State
727 P.2d 1153 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1986)
Oregon Art Tile Co. v. Hegele
164 P. 548 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1917)
Young v. State
63 Fla. 55 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1912)
Pratt v. Northern Pacific Express Co.
90 P. 341 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1907)
Carver v. Jackson County
29 P. 77 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1892)
Krewson v. Purdom
16 P. 480 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 P. 281, 13 Or. 563, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krewson-co-v-purdom-or-1886.