Turner v. O'Brien

11 Neb. 108
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 Neb. 108 (Turner v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. O'Brien, 11 Neb. 108 (Neb. 1881).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

The plaintiff in error presents eight points in his petition in error.

“1. That the court erred in excluding from the jury, as evidence for the plaintiff, the injunction bond [110]*110given by James D. Brown in tbe suit of said Brown against defendant O’Brien et al.”

I cannot conceive how tbe injunction bond could bave properly been admitted as evidence in tbe case. Tbe grain having been taken away by Turner, who acted for Brown and under bis employment, Brown, and probably Turner also, was liable to O’Brien for its value in case he was successful in the suit in equity which was brought to test tbe ownership of tbe grain. They were both responsible. But suppose tbe grain bad been stolen by some unknown person, would tbe sureties on tbe injunction bond bave been bolden for tbe value of it? I think not. “In- estimating damages sustained -by tbe improper issuing of an injunction * * * it may be said generally that nothing will be allowed which is not tbe actual, natural, and proximate result of tbe wrong committed. * * * In other words tbe liability upon tbe injunction bond is limited to such damages as arise from the suspension or invasion of vested legal rights by tbe injunction. Speculative and remote damages are not properly allowable, nor are those which are merely consequential, tbe limit being such damages as flow directly from tbe inj unction as its immediate consequence.” High on Injunc., see. 964, and authorities there cited. Therefore I do not think the injunction bond'was any security to O’Brien against tbe loss of said grain by theft or trespass ; nor that be should by reason of it bave relaxed in tbe least in bis vigilant care of said property. If I am not wrong in this view then tbe existence of said bond was entirely inconsequential, so far as tbe issue in this case was concerned, and it was quite irrelevant as evidence.

“ 2. Tbe court erred in excluding from the jury tbe testimony of Wm. R. Turner and Thomas M. Boyer, offered by plaintiff in rebuttal, and tending to show [111]*111that both Turner and Boyer lived in the vicinity of the place where the grain was threshed, for the threshing and hauling away of which they were arrested, and tending to show that defendant O’Brien, in going to the neighborhood where the threshing was done, would necessarily pass close by Turner’s and Boyer’s houses, and to show that he did not call on Turner nor Boyer, nor ask any explanation of them or either of them as to who had done the threshing or why it was done.”

It is claimed by the plaintiff in error in his brief, that the testimony referred to under this head would tend to show that O’Brien did not act in good faith, otherwise he would have called on Turner and Boyer and made inquiries of them as to what had become of the grain. It appears to me that in order to take that view we must first assume that O’Brien was merely acting a part; then, in order to overcome that assumption, we might say that he ought to have inquired of everybody in the neighborhood, including Turner and Boyer. But viewing the matter without such an assumption, and considering O’Brien’s own testimony on that subject, it does not appear that his failure to call on Turner and Boyer, or to make inquiries of them, was any evidence of bad faith on the part of O’Brien whatever. He had learned from Irvin and Compton, about the middle of October, that Turner and Boyer were threshing the grgin, and that Turner claimed to have been appointed receiver, and had given $1,500 bonds. Two or three days after that he saw Turner himself, who informed him that he was threshing out the grain, and that it was turning out well. So there could have been no occasion for his calling upon Mr. Turner at his residence, nor upon Boyer, to inquire as to who had taken the grain away. Nor do I think it any evidence of bad faith on his part that he did not call on them to inquire by what au[112]*112thority they had taken it. He knew that they had no authority from him, and he knew that Turner had authority from Brown, his opponent in litigation over the ownership and possession of the grain, and I think that it was no evidence of bad faith on his part that he did not apply for information on the subject to the employer of his opponent.

“3. The court erred in not allowing the plaintiff' Turner to testify, as he offered to do, that in threshing the grain he acted in good faith, and without intent to-steal the same, and as the agent of Dennis, receiver.”

The question of Turner’s good faith in threshing the grain was not before the jury. That he was not guilty of larceny, the crime for which he was prosecuted, was established by his discharge by order of the court in Washington county upon the failure of the grand jury to indict him, and no further inquiry on that point was necessary or proper. His method of threshing and hauling the grain, whether done in an open and public manner, as tending to show the want of good faith on the part of O’Brien in charging him with having stolen it, was pertinent and proper to-be proved, but the secret intent of Turner in threshing. and removing the grain is irrelevant in this case.

“4. The court erred in excluding from the jury the two receiver’s bonds offered by the plaintiff.”

One of the bonds above referred to was approved and filed February 14, the other May 16, 1873. The information against Turner and Boyer before the justice was filed by O’Brien January 14, 1873. The said receiver’s bonds had no existence at that time, nor at the date of the alleged conversion of the grain, and so-could not have been considered by O’Brien in making up his mind as to the right of Turner to remove the grain, or as to the intent with which it was removed if he had no right; and as the main questions before-[113]*113the district court in this case were whether there was prohable cause for making the said information and whether the same was made maliciously, I think that the said receiver’s bonds were properly excluded.

“ 5. The court erred in admitting in evidence on behalf of defendant O’Brien, the answer, summons, report of the referee, and journal entry in the ease of James D. Brown v. Samuel O’Brien et al.”

The said answer was filed on the 17th of May, 1873; the report of the referee was filed on the 12th December, 1873; and the journal entry made April 30, 1874, all of which dates are long subsequent to that of the criminal prosecution, which is the cause of action in this case. I do not see how they could possibly shed any light for the guidance of the jury upon the questions at issue. Whatever facts were alleged in the answer found by the referee and affirmed by the judgment of the court, might or might not be material in the case if proved by competent testimony, but they could not, as I understand the rule of evidence, be proved by the said records in a suit between these parties. And I think that probably this testimony was prejudicial to the plaintiff. As claimed by plaintiff in his brief, it presented a new and false issue to the jury, distracted their minds from the real one, and may have misled them in reaching the conclusion to which they arrived in this case. Eor these reasons I think there should be a new trial.

“ 6. The court erred in admitting in evidence on behalf of defendant O’Brien the answer to the cross-interrogatory No. 1, in the deposition of James D. Brown.”

The plaintiff took the deposition of James D.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Neb. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-obrien-neb-1881.