O'Meara v. North American Mining Co.

2 Nev. 112, 1866 Nev. LEXIS 28
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 Nev. 112 (O'Meara v. North American Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Meara v. North American Mining Co., 2 Nev. 112, 1866 Nev. LEXIS 28 (Neb. 1866).

Opinions

Opinion by

Beatty, J.

This was a proceeding in equity to compel the transfer of certain shares of stock to the plaintiff; and if said stock could not be transferred, then asking a decree for compensation and damages, for the failure to transfer the stock.

The plaintiff alleges that he had held five hundred and fifty feet of ground in the North American Mining Co. claim. That he first sold [115]*115and assigned three hundred and fifty-two and a half feet of it to individuals, and then conveyed the remainder, one hundred and ninety-seven and a half feet to the trustees of a corporation formed to work said claim. That in consideration of said conveyance he was to have had transferred to him one hundred and ninety-seven and a half shares of stock. But before the deed to the Trustees was recorded, he admits having sold ten feet more of the ground. So he only claims that the Trustees should transfer to him one hundred and eighty-seven and a half shares of stock.

The answer alleges that the plaintiff, before the conveyance to the Trustees, had conveyed to others three hundred and seventy-seven and a half feet, (say twenty-five feet more than plaintiff admits) and after the conveyance to the Trustees, and before they were ready to issue the stock, he had conveyed his interest in one hundred and eighty-two and a half feet to others. This would make more by ten feet than plaintiff ever claimed in the company.

On the trial of the case, the plaintiff proved that he had made a demand for his stock in the latter part of June, 1863 ; and proved that in the year 1864 this stock was at one time worth two hundred dollars per share, and rested.

The defendant proved conveyances from the plain tiff to the amount of three hundred and eighty-seven and a.half feet, which were admitted without objection. The defendant then offered in evidence three other deeds, or rather copies of deeds, from the plaintiff to other persons, for other portions of the same mining ground. These instruments were rejected, and this rejection forms the principal ground of complaint on the part of appellant. The facts in relation to each one of these instruments will be more particularly noticed when we come to consider the assignment of errors.

There are numerous errors assigned by appellants, only two of which it will be necessary to notice, as a determination of these points will probably settle the entire controversy. The first assignment of error is that the Court adopted an erroneous rule in estimating damages.'

The plaintiff, if entitled to stock at all, became so entitled about the last of June, 1863.

At that time he demanded his stock, and it was refused. He offered no proof of the value of the stock at the day he demanded [116]*116it, nor at the day of trial. He only offered proof of the highest market value of the stock between the tenth day of June, 1863, and the day of trial. It was proved that, at one time in April, 1864, the stock was worth two hundred dollars per share. And the Court gave judgment in damages for the value of the stock at that price. This was clearly an erroneous basis for the estimation of damages.

In the action of trover, it has been sometimes held that the measure of damages is the highest price of the article converted between the day of conversion and the day of trial. In other cases, between the conversion and the commencement of action.

Whilst it cannot be denied that there are some respectable authorities containing both these propositions, we cannot think they are founded either in reason or justice. We think such propositions contrary to some of the best settled principles of the Common Law.

The theory of all actions for damages is, that the plaintiff sues for those damages which he has already sustained. He could not say in his complaint that he had already sustained certain damage, and expected to sustain other damage before the suit was tried. Nor could he say he had sustained certain damage by the conversion of his property, and subsequently other damage arising from the fact that the particular kind of property converted had risen in value since the conversion.

The action is for converting the property; the utmost limit of damages would be the amount of money it would have taken to replace the property converted. But as the plaintiff has to wait for that money until he recovers it in his action, doubtless it would be just and proper to allow interest from the time of conversion. That the property afterwards rises or falls in value cannot be the subject of legitimate inquiry. If the plaintiff were allowed to show after the conversion the property rose in value, and the conversion deprived him of this profit, it would be proper to allow defendant in rebuttal to show that, if the property had not been converted, plaintiff would have sold, and that not he, but another, would have made the profit. Why not allow the defendant to show that if he had not converted the property, plaintiff would have exchanged it for other property, which afterwards became worthless, and thereby defeat all claim for damages ? Such propositions would not, of [117]*117course, be listened to with respect by any Court, yet we think they are scarcely less in conflict with the established and settled doctrines of the law than the proposition to allow the plaintiff to prove the temporary speculative value which an article may have had months or years after conversion. We think the true rule of damages in a case of trover is the value of the article when converted, with interest from that time to the time of trial, with perhaps this modification : when there has been an actual conversion at one time, which however is not clearly brought home to the knowledge of the plaintiff, and he subsequently makes a demand for the article, and is refused, he-may prove value at the time of the demand and refusal. Eor although there may have been an actual prior conversion, he is not properly bound by it until he knows it has been converted. As he could not know the actual time of conversion, he ought, as against a wrong-doer, to be allowed to prove the value at the time he first learned he could not obtain his property on demand.

And we are satisfied that some of the ablest Courts of the United States have uniformly held that the measure of damages is to be fixed by the value of the property at the time of conversion. The decisions of the Courts of Massachusetts and Kentucky have, we think, uniformly adopted this rule.

On the other hand, those Courts which have held that the highest price of an article between the time of conversion and trial, or commencement of the action, is the proper criterion of damages, are not uniform or consistent in their rulings. But, whatever may be the rule in a case of trover, there could be no room for doubt in such a proceeding as this.

The plaintiff asks for the stock itself, not for damages. If the Court finds he is entitled to the stock, but defendant cannot transfer the stock, because it has none to transfer, then there can certainly be but one rule or measure of damages : that is to decree as much as would buy the same amount of stock at the time the decree is rendered, for the money comes in lieu of the stock — stock which should be transferred at or after the decree, and it is wholly immaterial what that stock may have .been worth, at any former period.

The other assignment of error which we shall notice is as to the rejection of certain deeds offered in evidence by defendant and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Nev. 112, 1866 Nev. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omeara-v-north-american-mining-co-nev-1866.