L. B. Menefee Lumber Co. v. MacDonald

260 P. 444, 122 Or. 579, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 198
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 260 P. 444 (L. B. Menefee Lumber Co. v. MacDonald) 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
L. B. Menefee Lumber Co. v. MacDonald, 260 P. 444, 122 Or. 579, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 198 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

The question arises whether the allegations of the counterclaim are sufficient to state the cause of action which the court submitted to the *586 jury. Defendants suggest that we omit all portions of the counterclaim referring to conversion as surplusage, and that enough will remain to state a cause of action in assumpsit based upon a sale of merchandise. As suggested in defendants’ brief, the counterclaim will read as follows:

“That on or between the 31st day of August, 1923, and the first day of April, 1924, the plaintiff took and received 524,899 feet of lumber, the property of and belonging to the defendants; that said plaintiff sold, used * * lumber and the whole thereof to its own use and benefit # * ; that the plaintiff took and received said lumber and appropriated it to its own use and benefit, thereby said plaintiff promised to pay the said defendants a reasonable value for same. * *
“Said defendants have elected and hereby elect to bring this counterclaim and action against plaintiff in assumpsit to recover the reasonable value of said lumber, upon the implied promise of the plaintiff to pay for same.”

No motion or demurrer was filed against the answer ; no motion to elect was made during the course of the trial. As to the pleadings in their shrunken form, counsel for plaintiff, in his reply brief, states:

“ * * we do here and now demur to respondents’ counterclaim on the ground and for the reason that it, as expurgated, does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, defense or counterclaim.”

It was unnecessary to allege the agency of the Hubbard Lumber Company. The act of the agent can be charged as the act of the principal. 2 C. J. 904; Kitchen v. Holmes, 42 Or. 252 (70 Pac. 830); Interior Warehouse Co. v. Dunn, 80 Or. 528 (157 Pac. 806).

The counterclaim sets forth all of the elements suggested in Reichle v. Willamette Tribe No. 6, 118 Or. 357 (246 Pac. 214). But it will be noticed that it *587 fails to aver a breach of plaintiff’s duty to pay for the lumber; that is, nonpayment of the contractual obligation is not alleged. Ordinarily, in order to state a cause of action, it is necessary to allege a duty owed by the defendants to the plaintiff, a breach of that duty, and an injury to the plaintiff as a result thereof. The first and the third of these elements are set forth in the complaint in its expurgated form, but the second, a breach, is missing. A counterclaim must, of course, contain all of the elements of a cause of action: Chance v. Carter, 81 Or. 229 (158 Pac. 947); Bancroft’s Code Pleading, § 386.

Generally, where the breach consists of the failure to pay money, the complaint should allege nonpayment: Lent v. New York & Mass. R. Co., 130 N. Y. 504 (29 N. E. 988); Hudelson v. First National Bank, 51 Neb. 557 (71 N. W. 304); 4 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 942; 13 C. J. 734; Pomeroy’s Code Bemedies, p. 683, note. But while the plaintiff must allege nonpayment in order to aver the breach, payment by a peculiar anomaly of law is an affirmative defense, so that generally evidence of payment is not admissible under a general denial. The authorities are collected and analyzed in 10 Cornell Law Quarterly, 269. In this case, however, the reply alleged payment to the Hubbard Lumber Company for all lumber received by the plaintiff. The issue of payment and of nonpayment was gone into fully in the evidence without objection. A technical oversight of this character remaining undiscovered until after the verdict and appeal should not be fatal in view of the provisions of Article VII, Section 3c, of our Constitution, page 131, Or. L. We shall, therefore, regard it no further.

But counsel for the plaintiff contends that, even if it were possible to place upon the complaint the *588 construction adopted by tbe court below, tbe defendants should not be permitted to shift from tort into contract as the foundation of their case. The counterclaim itself notifies the plaintiff that the defendants expected to reply upon assumpsit; it avers that the defendants waived the tort and reply upon the implied promise of the plaintiff to pay for the property wrongfully taken and kept. The rule is well established that where the tort-feasor has derived a benefit from the conversion, the owner of the property may sue the wrongdoer in assumpsit for the value of the benefit he received: Crown Cycle Co. v. Brown, 39 Or. 285 (64 Pac. 451); H ornefius v. Wilkinson, 51 Or. 45 (93 Pac. 474); 2 R. C. L. 755. The principle of law, which underlies this theory of recovery, is well stated by Professor Woodward in The Law of Quasi Contracts, Section 270:

“Upon the commission of a tort an obligation always rests upon the tort-feasor to compensate the person injured for the damage suffered by him. The commission of a tort, however, frequently results not only in damage to the person injured but in a benefit to the tort-feasor. In the case of conversion by the wrongful sale of another’s goods, for example, the owner suffers damage to the extent of the value of the goods and the converter is benefited to the extent of the sum realized by the sale. Wherever there is such an enrichment of the wrongdoer he is clearly under a moral obligation (aside from the obligation to pay damages) to make restitution, either in specie or in value. Although the injured party already had an adequate remedy at law, it is not surprising that the courts came to regard this moral obligation to make restitution as analogous to a debt, and by the familiar device of a fictitious promise, brought it within the reach of the simple and convenient remedy of indebitatus asswnpsit.”

*589 In order to recover under this doctrine, the plaintiff must establish two propositions; first, the commission of the tort, and, second, the receipt of a benefit by the wrongdoer. Since the court found that there was no evidence that plaintiff’s possession of the lumber was wrongful it eliminated tort from the ease entirely, and submitted it to the jury as though the plaintiff purchased some of defendants’ lumber and failed to pay for it. In its pleadings and throughout the trial, the plaintiff insisted that the Hubbard Company had authority to sell this lumber and put the plaintiff in possession of it; it insisted that it had paid the Hubbard Company and that the Hubbard Company had authority to receive payment. This shift in the theory of the case that the court made was in the direction of the defendants’ contentions. The shift in position is, therefore, an abandonment of the allegations in the complaint that the plaintiff’s possession of the lumber was wrongful, and resulted in an implied promise, to the new position that its possession was a rightful one and was accompanied by a promise to pay the reasonable value of the lumber.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 444, 122 Or. 579, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-b-menefee-lumber-co-v-macdonald-or-1927.