Suydam v. Jenkins, Sheriff

3 Sandf. 614
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 22, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 3 Sandf. 614 (Suydam v. Jenkins, Sheriff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suydam v. Jenkins, Sheriff, 3 Sandf. 614 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

By the Court. Duer, J.

We think, as we intimated upon [619]*619the hearing, that the referee was entirely right, in deciding that the plaintiffs had failed to prove their title to any portion of the flour which they replevied. Then1 counsel judiciously limited their claim to the forty-six barrels, which he wished us to consider as the residue of the five hundred barrels originally sold or mortgaged; but the five hundred barrels were themselves parcel of a larger quantity, and they had not been so selected and separated as to enable the plaintiffs to identify any portion of them as their property. Rapalye v. Mackie, 6 Cow. 250, fortified as it is by the prior decisions which are there referred to, is, on this point, a conclusive authority. The defendant was therefore entitled to judgment, and the only question is whether the amount which he ought to recover, has been justly computed by the referee.

Instead of asking for a return of the property replevied, the defendant elected to take judgment for its value. The section of the statute (2 R. S. 531, § 55,) which gives this election, is silent as to the damages; but the understanding of the profession undoubtedly is, that whether the judgment be for a return of the goods, or for their value, the right to damages equally attaches. We are satisfied, upon consideration, that this construction may reasonably be given to the general words in the preceding 53d section; and it appears to be sanctioned by the opinion of Ch. J. Nelson, in Snow v. Roys, (22 Wend. 604.) It is indeed evident, that in whichever form the judgment is entered, damages are in most cases necessary to be given, in order to complete the indemnity to which the defendant is entitled. In the present case, the referee has allowed damages in addition to the value of the property; and neither party complains that he has done so, yet both, although upon very different grounds, insist that he has erred in computing the amount for which judgment ought to be rendered. He has assessed the value according to the market price of flour at the time the defendant made his election, and has allowed, as damages, interest upon the sum thus ascertained from the time of the replevy. The counsel for the plaintiffs, however, contends that the value ought to be computed by a reference to the market price of the flour when replevied; and the counsel for the defendant, that the value is properly stated, [620]*620but that in the estimate of damages, the difference between that value and the highest sum for which the flour could have been sold, at any time, after the replevying and before the defendant’s election, should have been included. Much ingenuity and learning have been displayed by the counsel in support of their respective views, and it is an act of justice to say, that the court has been materially aided by their labors and researches.

The argument involves a general question which in the first instance we shall endeavor to solve; and shall then inquire whether the solution which we adopt is consistent with the adjudged cases and with the provisions of the statute.

The general question which we deem it necessary to examine is, what is the proper measure of damages, “ The rule for ascertaining the sum which the injured party ought to recover, in all cases, where personal property is wrongfully taken or detained, whether by force, by fraud, or by process of law.” It is a question of wide extent and corresponding interest, and we are not without the hope, that the observations which we intend to make may have some tendency to redeem this branch of the law from its present state of confusion and uncertainty. Unless we are greatly mistaken, there are certain indisputable rules, or more correctly, principles of natural justice, by the application of which the amount that the injured party ought to recover, may, in all cases, be readily and certainly determined. Setting aside the exceptional cases in which exemplary damages maybe justly claimed and given, and confining ourselves to those in which the remedy sought is simply pecuniary, the principles which, as it seems to us, are manifestly just, and universal in their application, are, that the owner, to whom compensation is due, must be fully indemnified, and that the wrongdoer must not be permitted to derive any benefit or advantage whatever from his wrongful act. It may frequently happen, that these principles, when applied, will coincide in the result; but there are many cases in which it will be seen that the application of both is necessary. An indemnity must always be given to the injured party; but it is not, in all cases, the measme of the damages which the wrongdoer ought to pay.

First, the injured party must be indemnified, he must be [621]*621placed in the same situation in which he would have been, had the wrong not been committed, or had it been instantly repaired by the payment of the compensation then due. As the actual loss to the owner is the same, whatever may be the form of the action in which its reparation is sought, the sum due to him for its compensation must be the same, whether he is the plaintiff in trespass or trover, or the defendant in replevin. There can be no variance in the amount of an indemnity, and if its criterion can be fixed, any departure from the standard which it establishes must be capricious and arbitrary, and must involve more or less of injustice to one or other of the parties to the injury.

Then what are the rules ? What the process of computation by which the just amount of the indemnity claimed may be ascertained? We reply, with some confidence, that it will be ascertained in all cases, by adding to the val/ue of the property when the owner is dispossessed, the damages which he is proved to home sustained, from, the loss of its possession. It is when the property is wrongfully taken or detained, that a right of action accrues to the owner. He is then entitled to demand a compensation for his loss, and if his demand is then complied with, it is plain that the value of the property at that time, by which we mean its market value, the sum for which it could then be sold, would constitute, at least, a portion of the amount that the wrongdoer would be bound to pay. This sum may, therefore, be fairly considered as a debt then due, and, consequently, interest, until the time of trial or judgment, must in all cases be added to complete the indemnity. It is not, however, in all cases that the value of the property when the owner is dispossessed is to be determined by a reference to its market price, nor in all that the damages, ivhick are to be added to the value, are to be limited to the mere allowance of interest. In most cases, the market value of the property is the best criterion of its value to the owner, but in some its value to the owner may greatly exceed the sum that any purchaser would be willing to pay. The value to the owner may be enhanced by personal or family considerations, as in the case of family pictures, plate, &c., and we do not doubt that the pretium affectionis,” instead of the market price, ought [622]*622then to be considered by the jury or court, in estimating the value. In these cases, however, it is evident, that no fixed rule to govern the estimate of value, can be laid down, but it must of necessity be left to the sound discretion of a jury, in the exercise of a reasonable sympathy with the feelings of the owner. When the market price is justly assumed as the measure of value, there are numerous cases in which the addition of interest would fail to compensate the owner for his actual loss.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Sandf. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suydam-v-jenkins-sheriff-nysuperctnyc-1850.