Mackin v. Blythe

35 Ill. App. 216, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 540
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 Ill. App. 216 (Mackin v. Blythe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mackin v. Blythe, 35 Ill. App. 216, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 540 (Ill. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Moran, J.

Appellant, Thomas Mackin, was the landlord of certain premises, which were rented by a written lease from him to one Thomas H. Frances, and were occupied by said Frances and wife, and the appellee, their daughter. On April 21, 1888, there being then some five months’ rent, amounting to §200, due under the lease, said Thomas Mackin issued a distress warrant against the goods and chattels of Thomas FT. Frances and Mrs. Thomas FL Frances, and delivered the same to Keegan to execute.

On the morning of April 25, 1888, said Keegan, accompanied by appellant John Mackin, son of Thomas Mackin, and some others, went to the premises and levied upon and carried away the household furniture found in the house, con-is ting of carpets, beds and bedding, chairs, dressing cases, kitchen range and furniture, and various other articles of household use. The evidence shows that from December 31, 1886, appellee had held a chattel mortgage on said household furniture, executed to her by her father and mother, said Thomas FT. Frances and his wife, and that from the time of giving said mortgage up to April 20, 1888, the furniture had heen used as the furniture of said rented premises by said Frances and wife, and appellee had lived with them as a boarder. On April 20th the appellee placed a custodian in the house, under her mortgage, and notices were posted of a sale of the property under the mortgage, and the sale was made, or was just in process of being made, at the time Keegan and Mackin and the others entered the house and took the furniture under the distress warrant. Appellee claims to have bought in the property for the amount due on the mortgage. At the time the distress warrant was levied and the property taken, appellee notified Keegan and John Mackin that it was her property, hut they proceeded to take it out of the house, and had it removed to a warehouse and stored. Among other things taken by said Keegan and Mackin were two trunks containing wearing apparel, and which appellee at the time requested, them not to take as they contained all her personal apparel, but they, with some show of rudeness, insisted on taking the trunks, offering, however, after they had them on the street, that if she would open them and show them to contain her wearing apparel, she might have them back. That she declined to do. After the goods were taken to the warehouse, a list was made out, showing what had been distrained, and filed in the justice office, together with the distress warrant. The goods were detained, though demanded by appellee,till after the rent for which the distress was levied was paid, which was done May 14th, when they were returned by Keegan to appellee, and receipted for by her. She then brought this action against Keegan and the two Mackins to recover for the trespass and the injury done to the goods, and on the trial, after the suit had been dismissed as to Keegan, the jury rendered a verdict for $1,000 damages against the two Mackins. The jury found in answer to special interrogatories that the actual damages suffered by appellee were $85.

The question is, can the verdict, so far as it consisted of punitive exemplary damages, be sustained as againstthe appellant, Thomas Mackin, under the evidence and instructions set forth in this record. The household furniture taken is shown to have been the furniture which was used in the house rented by Thomas FT. Frances, and which he occupied with his family. Such furniture would be presumed to be his (Hanchett v. Rice, 22 Ill. App. 442), and liable to distress for rent due from him until the contrary was shown. A levy on said furniture for the rent expressly directed by Mackin would not make him liable for exemplary damages, unless it was shown that he knew that the furniture did not belong to said Frances, but was the property of appellee, nor would the knowledge on Mackin’s part that there was a chattel mortgage on the furniture deprive him of the right of levying his distress thereon, or subject him to liability for punitive damages for so levying. How, there is no evidence in the case tending to show that Keegan or John Mackin had any other authority from Thomas Mackin than that given in the distress warrant, to wit, to levy for the rent on the goods and chattels of Thomas H. and Mrs. Thomas H. Frances. There is no evidence in the record that Thomas Mackin knew at the time he directed the levy of the distress warrant that appellee had taken possession of the goods under her mortgage; therefore, if Keegan and John Mackin wrongfully seized the goods, knowing that she had taken such possession, or had purchased in the goods under a mortgage sale, Thomas Mackin would be liable only for the actual damages caused by such seizure, unless with full knowledge he ratified the same; nor do we think that his- refusal to deliver the household goods up to her after he knew she claimed them as hers under the mortgage sale should subject him to punitive damages, if in good faith lie proposed, by retaining the said goods, to test the validity of her mortgage, and of her title to the goods thereunder. It appears from the record that he questioned the bona fieles of her mortgage (a matter which we shall have occasion to discuss later on), and levying upon the goods was one mode by which that question could be tested, and under the circumstances, about the only mode open to him; and if he was guilty of no bad faith he could, even if mistaken, be held for no more than the actual damages resulting from taking and detaining the goods. Miller et al. v. Kirby, 74 Ill. 242.

It is strenuously argued, however, by counsel for appellee, that Keegan and John Mackin were guilty of a wanton and wilful disregard of appellee’s rights, and reckless and oppressive conduct toward her in taking her trunks containing her wearing apparel, which were in no way subject to the claim for rent, or to the distress warrant, and detaining them from her for some three weeks, and he. suggests, and from an examination of the record we are inclined to agree with him, that it was this which the jury thought was evidence of malice, and upon which they founded the verdict rendered by them. Counsel does not claim, however, that the taking of appellee’s trunks was authorized by the distress warrant, or in any manner directed by Thomas Maekin. It is sought to make him liable on the ground that he adopted and ratified the act. It is said that Thomas Maekin refused to deliver the goods upon demand, but retained all of them as subject to his claim for rent, and thereby reaped the fruits of John Maekin and Keegan’s wrongful and malicious act in seizing the trunks of clothing. In order to make Thomas Maekin liable for punitive damages, on this theory, it is indispensable that he shall be shown to have knowledge that the trunks containing appellee’s wearing apparel had been taken with the othér goods, and that he retained them with such knowledge. We have searched this record in vain for evidence which shows that Thomas Maekin was ever informed by any person that trunks containing appellee’s wearing apparel were taken and stored with the other goods. We do not find a syllable of evidence that would put him on notice of the fact. Counsel states that Thomas Maekin instructed Keegan to hold, not only the furniture, but the private trunks of Mrs. Blythe till the rent was paid, but has referred us to no place in the record where such evidence is found. Everywhere in the record where any information is shown to have been given to Thomas Maekin, “ the goods,” or “ the furniture ” is what is spoken of, but there is nowhere, so far as we have been able to discover, any mention to him, or by him, of trunks or of wearing apparel.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ill. App. 216, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackin-v-blythe-illappct-1890.