Largilliere Co., Bankers v. Kunz

244 P. 404, 41 Idaho 767, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 142
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 244 P. 404 (Largilliere Co., Bankers v. Kunz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Largilliere Co., Bankers v. Kunz, 244 P. 404, 41 Idaho 767, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 142 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

WILLIAM A. LEE, C. J.

— Appellant is a domestic corporation engaged in the banking business at Soda Springs, Caribou county, Idaho. On August 16, 1922, it held a chattel mortgage on 2401 head of sheep that were being kept by the. mortgagor on a ranch in Bonneville county, about ten miles north of the town of Freedom, this town being divided by the Idaho-Wyoming state line. On this date the mort *770 gagor and appellant agreed upon the value of these sheep and that such value should be credited upon the mortgage indebtedness, and thereupon appellant took possession of the sheep. On August 21st thereafter, the Freedom State Bank, a Wyoming corporation, with its principal place of business at Freedom, on the Wyoming side, seized 77 head of these sheep under a claim of right by virtue of a chattel mortgage which it held on that number, and drove them into Wyoming. The Freedom State Bank sold these sheep to respondent Kunz, who returned them to this state, placing them in the Fish Pond Feed Yard, at Soda Springs, in said Caribou county, where they were taken from him in this action of claim and delivery.

Prior to these 77 head of sheep being returned to this state, appellant prosecuted to judgment an action against the Freedom State Bank for having converted them to its use, and also for damages for the one killed in committing the trespass.

The ewes seized and taken into Wyoming were alleged to be of the reasonable value of $10 per head, the lambs $8.00, and the ewe killed by the dogs $10. Plaintiff in that action placed its damages at $706, the market value of the sheep driven away and of the one killed. Judgment for that amount was given in that action. It does not appear how plaintiff obtained service upon defendant, a foreign corporation, but it is conceded that a personal judgment was entered against the Freedom State Bank in favor of appellant equivalent to the value of the animals taken, and that this judgment is wholly unsatisfied. This cause was tried by the court without a jury upon stipulation of facts.

Appellant contends that the remedy against the Freedom State Bank in the former action is not inconsistent with the remedy of claim and delivery in this action. Respondent insists that the bringing of that action was an election of remedies that bars a recovery in this, and the learned trial judge appears to have so held. The findings and conclusions were waived, but the memorandum decision, directing judgment for defendant, states:

*771 “Plaintiff undoubtedly in its former action sought to treat the action as one wherein the defendant by taking possession of the sheep was under implied obligation to make payment of the value thereof and accordingly took judgment under that theory, and not having been able to realize on the judgment, now seeks to treat the transaction otherwise and recover the identical property for which they sought in the former action to recover the value, which they are undoubtedly debarred from doing.”

From the judgment for defendant this appeal is taken upon the single assignment that the court erred in concluding as a matter of law that the plaintiff had elected its remedy in the former action and is barred from any relief in this action. Appellant asserts that the only proposition of law involved in this case is the question of election of remedies. Respondent’s contention is that the court did not err in holding that appellant in the former action had sought to recover under implied contract and had thus made a binding election of remedies; that an action upon an implied contract for the value of the property, prosecuted to judgment, is inconsistent with the bringing of an action thereafter in claim and delivery for the same property.

If appellant’s action against the Freedom State Bank for a money judgment had been an action in assumpsit, it would have been an election of a remedy inconsistent with the action of claim and delivery which appellant now seeks to maintain in this action. Where one has been wrongfully deprived of his property, he may waive the tort and sue for the reasonable value of the property so taken, upon the agreement which the law implies against the wrongdoer that he must pay its reasonable value. In such case the title to the property passes from the owner to the wrongdoer by the election of the owner to treat the transaction as a sale on his part, and it would be inconsistent for him to thereafter seek to recover possession of the specific property, although he may not have had satisfaction of the money judgment which he obtained for its conversion.

It is clear from the record in this case that the former action was not in assumpsit, but was an action to recover *772 damages for the conversion of these sheep. Among other things, the complaint alleges that the Freedom State Bank “did on the 21st day of August, 1922, take and carry away 40 head of said ewes and 37 head of said lambs and did drive all of said sheep into the state of Wyoming and did on said day dog and drive the remainder of said sheep and did cause one other of said ewes to be bitten by their dog, fatally, .... that all of said hereinabove described sheep were on the said 21st day of August, 1922, converted by the said defendant to their own use.....That this plaintiff was damaged on the 21st day of August, 1922, by reason of the taking, carrying away and killing of said sheep in the sum of Seven Hundred Six Dollars, no part of which has been paid.” The complaint in that action alleges all facts necessary to state a cause of action in conversion.

Election of remedies is the right of a party in an action to choose one of two or more coexisting remedial rights, where such rights arise out of the same facts; but the term is generally limited to a choice by a party between inconsistent remedial rights, the assertion of one being necessarily repugnant to or a repudiation of the other. (20 C. J. 2, see. 1.) As a general rule an election of remedies is any decisive act of a party, with knowledge of his rights and of the facts, that indicates an intent to pursue one remedy rather than the other. To a proper application of this rule at least three things are essential: (1) There must be in fact two or more coexisting remedies between which the party has the right to elect; (2) the remedies thus open to him must be inconsistent; and (3) he must, by actually bringing his action or by some other decisive act, with knowledge of the facts, indicate his choice between two inconsistent remedies. Where the remedies are so inconsistent that the pursuit of one necessarily involves or implies the negation of the other, the party who deliberately and with full knowledge of the facts invokes one of such remedies, is said to have made his election, and cannot thereafter have the benefit of the other. (Id., sec. 18.)

In Whitley v. Spokane etc. Ry. Co., 23 Ida. 642, 132 Pac. 121, it is said that in order to apply the doctrine of election *773 of remedies to a party, lie must actually have bad at bis command two inconsistent remedies.

Tbe learned trial judge was in error in bolding that the first action was upon an implied obligation to pay tbe value of tbe property wrongfully taken. Instead of that action being in assumpsit, it was 'in trespass.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 404, 41 Idaho 767, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/largilliere-co-bankers-v-kunz-idaho-1925.