Swenson v. Kleinschmidt

10 Mont. 473
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 Mont. 473 (Swenson v. Kleinschmidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swenson v. Kleinschmidt, 10 Mont. 473 (Mo. 1891).

Opinions

Harwood, J.

Action for damages for taking and conversion of personal property.

The plaintiff for cause of action avers that on June 1, 1887, he possessed and owned 250 cords of wood of the value of $287.50; that between said date and October 20, 1887, defendants unlawfully took and conveyed away said wood and converted the same to their use, to plaintiff’s damage in said sum, [475]*475for which judgment is demanded, with interest at ten per cent per annum from the time of such alleged taking.

Defendants made answer denying the allegations of the complaint; and further alleged as new matter of defense or counterclaim a transaction connected with the cutting of said wood, in effect as follows: That defendants, Albert Kleinschmidt and Addison Smith, were copartners, doing business in the firm name of A. Kleinschmidt & Co.; and that during the winter of 1885-86 the Butte Manufacturing Company, a corporation existing under the laws of Montana, employed plaintiff and L. Mangarud and C. I. Lindguist, as partners, to cut wood for said company at an agreed price of $1.15 per cord for cutting and packing the wood; that said partners under said agreement cut the wood in question, but the same was only 205-| cords in quantity, instead of 250 cords as alleged by plaintiff; that while plaintiff and his said partners were cutting said wood, defendants, for said Butte Manufacturing Company, furnished plaintiff and his said partners, at their instance and request, goods, wares, and merchandise at and for the price of $153, and that plaintiff and his said partners became indebted to the Butte Manufacturing Company therefor in said sum; that during the year 1886 said debt owing by plaintiff and his said partners for said goods was assigned by the Butte Manufacturing Company to defendants. Defendants’ answer further alleges that plaintiff and his said copartners became indebted to one Phil. E. Evans in the sum of $9.07, which is alleged to have been assigned to defendants, A. Kleinschmidt & Co., and that plaintiff and his said partners assumed and agreed to pay the same. Defendants also allege that defendants, A. Kleinschmidt & Co., paid $10.74 at the instance and request of plaintiff and his said partners for hauling said goods to them, which plaintiff and his said partners agreed to pay. Defendants further allege that long before the commencement of this action all of said indebtedness of plaintiff and his partners was assigned to and became the property of defendants, A. Kleinschmidt & Co., and that all of said wood was sold to and became the property of the same defendants prior to the commencement of the action; that said wood was not packed or piled, and that in order to ascertain the amount of said wood defendants were compelled [476]*476to pay, and did pay, fifteen cents per cord for packing tlie same, •amounting to tlie sum of $30.80. In conclusion defendants offered to pay plaintiff tlie sum of $32.33, which they admitted was a balance due plaintiff and his said partners for cutting •said wood.

Plaintiff by replication denied said matters set up by the •answer, alleging, however, that said wood was cut by plaintiff and said Mangarud and Lindguist, not as partners, but each ■cutting for himself.

Upon the issues thus formed the case was tried, and during the course of the trial, as appears by defendants’ bill of exceptions, plaintiff was sworn, and while testifying on his own behalf, said the wood in controversy was cut by himself, Mangarud, and Lindguist for the Butte Manufacturing Company; that said parties were chopping together, and they chopped about 250 cords; that plaintiff chopped 120 cords, and one of the others chopped about 75 or 80 cords, and the other from 85 to 90 cords; that these choppers had no contract with defendants, but their contract was with the Butte Manufacturing Company at the agreed price of $1.15 per cord, and that the company was to furnish grub, and would receive the wood about June 1, 1886;” that they “chopped till about February 16,- 1886, and quit because the company busted up.” He said: “Nobody offered to pay us. I never received anything but goods, about $150 worth I think, for myself and the two men that were with me. Each man chopped for himself. I am suing for what they chopped too. The goods we received were in part payment for the wood. The amount was to be deducted.” Plaintiff then offered in evidence what he claimed was a transfer from said Mangarud and Lindguist to him of the wood which each of them cut. The papers offered are in terms as follows: —

“Deer Lodge, April 24, 1886.

“This is to certify that I, the undersigned, have given S. Swenson, of Deer Lodge, full authority to dispose of all the wood belonging to me in Mt. Powell gulch in Deer Lodge County, and collect money for the same if sold. The wood is marked thus: ‘C-I-L.’

(Signed,) “C. Lindguist.”

[477]*477“Deer Lodge, April 24, 1886.

“This is to certify that I, the undersigned, have turned my wood over to S. Swenson, of Deer Lodge, and given him full authority to dispose of it in any way he may deem satisfactory. Also, collect money for me for the same if sold, all wood belonging to me in Mt. Powell wood camp, and are marked thus; ‘ L-M.’

(Signed,) “L. J. Mangarud.”

These papers were offered in evidence, as the bill of exceptions recites, “to show title in plaintiff to the wood cut by said parties,” and to the introduction of which the defendant objected, for the reason that the same were incompetent and insufficient to show title in plaintiff to said wood. The court overruled the objection, and admitted said papers to be read in evidence to the jury; to which ruling defendants excepted, and assign the same as error.

Plaintiff’s action is for damages for the conversion of 250 cords of wood, his property. He must prove the essential allegations of his complaint to make a cause for recovery. As said by Bishop, “to maintain this particular action (trover), he must have a right both to the property and to the possession of it.” (Bishop’s Non-Contract Law, 396.) Plaintiff has just shown by his testimony that when this wood was cut, certain separate described portions of it was not his property, but was the property of others. To make out his case as to that wood plaintiff must show conveyance of title to him. This he undertook to prove by introducing said papers. But said papers do not show a transfer of title. They constitute mere revocable grants of authority or agency to plaintiff, to do stated acts in relation to the wood belonging to said Lindguist and Mangarud. The terms used indicate no intention to transfer the property. The contrary is shown. In the.first, the maker gives the plaintiff authority to dispose of all the wood belonging to him, “and collect money for the same if sold.” In the second, the plaintiff is authorized by the maker to dispose of the wood, “and collect the money for me for the same, if sold.” If said papers were sufficient to show, or tended to show, a transfer of title in this action, the same papers ought certainly to be good evi[478]*478denee for the same purpose in case said Lindguist or Mangarud had brought an action against plaintiff for recovery of possession of their wood respectively, or for damages for the conversion thereof by plaintiff. Said papers can in no way be construed to have such an effect. So far as said papers show, the makers of them still own the respective portions of the wood as plaintiff testified.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mont. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swenson-v-kleinschmidt-mont-1891.