Seaboard Securities Co., Inc. v. Berg

31 P.2d 503, 177 Wash. 203, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 548
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1934
DocketNo. 24872. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 P.2d 503 (Seaboard Securities Co., Inc. v. Berg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seaboard Securities Co., Inc. v. Berg, 31 P.2d 503, 177 Wash. 203, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 548 (Wash. 1934).

Opinion

Blake, J. —

This case has been here before. Seaboard Securities Co. v. Berg, 170 Wash. 681, 17 P. (2d) 646. Since a comprehensive statement of the facts out of which the litigation arose is contained in the former opinion, only such facts will be stated here as are necessary to dispose of the contentions made on this appeal. The only parties now interested are the plaintiff, Seaboard Securities Company, and the intervener, International & Industrial Securities Corporation. Since both have appealed from the judgment entered in the court below, we shall refer to them as “plaintiff” and “intervener.”

In June, 1927, Stephen Berg purchased from Albert Pick & Company, under conditional bill of sale, a large quantity of furniture, which went into the Bergonian hotel, in Seattle. The conditional bill of sale contained a covenant on the part of Berg that he would not incumber the furniture or permit any liens or encumbrances to accrue against it without the consent of the *205 vendor. In 1928, Berg mortgaged Ms interest in the furniture to plaintiff. About May 1, 1930, Berg turned the hotel and furniture over to plaintiff.

Plaintiff commenced this action to foreclose its chattel mortgage on May 24, 1930, joining as a party defendant Albert Pick & Company, the vendor under the conditional bill of sale to Berg. In the meantime, Albert Pick & Company had assigned its vendor’s interest in the contract of conditional sale to the intervener. This assignment was not filed. Neither Berg nor plaintiff had notice of the assignment until August, 1931, when the intervener filed its complaint in intervention, setting up an action in replevin.

On the former trial, judgment was entered foreclosing plaintiff’s mortgage and dismissing the complaint in intervention. As appears from the opinion on the former appeal, the trial court predicated its judgment upon two theories: (1) That the conditional bill of sale was a defective chattel mortgage; and (2) that the complaint in intervention should be dismissed in any event, because the intervener had not made any demand on plaintiff for the return of the property. The intervener appealed. This court reversed the judgment, holding the conditional bill of sale effective as such, and holding further that demand was not a prerequisite to intervener’s right to maintain its action in replevin. The cause was remanded, “with instructions to the trial court to proceed to hear evidence upon the question of damages to appellant and enter its judgment therefor.” From judgment for damages entered pursuant to the remand, both plaintiff and intervener appeal.

We shall first discuss the questions raised by the intervener’s appeal. The court adopted as a measure of damages the depreciation in the value of the property during the period of unlawful detention. The *206 property was surrendered to intervener in January, 1933, at which, time the court found its value to be twelve thousand dollars. Neither party raises any question as to this valuation.

The court found that the unlawful detention commenced August 7, 1931, the day intervener filed its complaint in intervention, and therefore determined the value of the furniture as of that date, for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of depreciation. The valuation so found was $22,125. The depreciation in the market value of the furniture was, therefore, found to be $10,125. The judgment entered, however, was for $7,849.19. This amount was arrived at by adding* interest, at the rate of six per cent per annum, on $22,-125 from August 7, 1931, to $10,125, and deducting therefrom the sums of $1,200 and $3,100, with interest, on account of repairs made and taxes paid on the property by plaintiff.

The intervener complains of this judgment on three grounds: (1) That the court should have fixed the valuation of the property as of May 1, 1930, for the purpose of determining the amount of depreciation, rather than August 7, 1931; (2) that no deductions should have been allowed on account of repairs made and taxes paid on the furniture by plaintiff; and (3) that, in any event, the evidence showed the value of the furniture to be much greater than $22,125 on August 7, 1931. We shall discuss these contentions in order.

It is contended that the opinion on the former appeal established the law of the case with respect to the time the wrongful detention commenced. This contention is based on the following language contained in the opinion:

“The act of executing the mortgage and delivering possession to respondent amounted to a conversion.”

*207 If this language means that the possession of plaintiff was wrongful in its inception, then the contention must he sustained. For where the original taking of property is tortious, its valuation for the purpose of the alternative money judgment is to be determined as of the date of the taking. Wells on Replevin (2d ed.), §534; Armour v. Seixas, 80 Wash. 181, 141 Pac. 308. But where the original taking is not tortious, such valuation is to be determined as of the date of demand. Hartnett v. Wilson, 31 Cal. App. 678, 161 Pac. 281; Jones v. Bank of Commerce, 131 Ark. 362, 199 S. W. 103; Hutson v. Bassett, 35 S. W. (2d) (Tex. Civ. App.) 231; Anglo-California Trust Co. v. Collins, 192 Cal. 315, 219 Pac. 982; Brigham v. Thrailkill, 166 Ark. 548, 266 S. W. 958.

In Wells on Replevin, § 534, the rule is stated as follows :

“If the taking was rightful, originally, and the defendant refuse to deliver, on request, his detention from that moment is wrongful, and damages • should be assessed from that time.”

While the rule has not been specifically invoked by this court, it was indicated to be the correct rule in the case of American Packing Co. v. Luketa, 115 Wash. 1, 196 Pac. 1, 22 A. L. R. 206.

The importance of the rule is apparent in this case, since there was a very great depreciation in the market value of the furniture between May 1, 1930, when plaintiff took possession, and August 7, 1931, when intervener made its demand by filing its complaint in intervention.

In the absence of the above quoted language from the opinion on the former appeal, it would hardly be contended that the taking of possession of the property by plaintiff was, in its inception, tortious. It is only when such language is lifted from its context that *208 it is susceptible of the contention that plaintiff’s possession was tortious from the beginning. For, when read in the light of the issue the court was deciding, and in connection with the full discussion of that issue, it is quite apparent that the word “conversion” was not used in its conventional sense of a tortious taking. The issue was whether a demand for possession was a prerequisite to intervener’s right to maintain its action in replevin. The whole argument, holding that such demand was not necessary, is predicated upon specific clauses in the contract of conditional sale, according the vendor the right of immediate possession under certain stipulated conditions.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P.2d 503, 177 Wash. 203, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaboard-securities-co-inc-v-berg-wash-1934.