Weitz v. Wenham

6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 563
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 563 (Weitz v. Wenham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weitz v. Wenham, 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 563 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Jenner, J.

(orally).

This case is before the court on certain assignments of error claimed to have occurred in the trial below. The petition in replevin, is in the ordinary form. The answer of Grossman, assignee of Weitz, is a denial that the Wenhams were owners of the property described in the petition. He, further answering, says that under color of the writ of replevin plaintiffs below took property not described in the writ, and property of which they were not the owners. And he sets forth a schedule of property that he claims was ,so taken, and which they had no legal right to take under their writ, because they were not the owners of it.

The reply and the amendment to the reply admits that the plaintiff took the property under color of the writ of replevin, and avers that all the articles and property seized by the officer and delivered to the plaintiffs, in fact belonged to the plaintiffs, or was so wrongfully intermingled with the plaintiff’s property that they could not distinguish and separate their own, therefore they had a right to take all.

There was a motion filed to make the reply more definite and certain, which was sustained, and a motion to strike out, which was. overruled.

We think no prejudice resulted to the defendant below by reason of the overruling of said motion.

There was also an offer by plaintiffs to confess judgment before me case was tried, in the sum of $321, which was not accepted. The parties went to tiial, and it is claimed by counsel for plaintiff in error that by reason of that offer he is entitled to a judgment for the sum of $321. We do not understand that to be the law. The offer to confess a judgment has only this effect: If a sum less than the amount offered had been recovered by the defendant below, the costs made after the offer should have been taxed against him; if he had recovered a larger sum, then all costs should have been taxed against the plaintiffs.

There are ten assignments of error, all covered by these: The court erred in the admission of evidence and the exclusion of evidence, in its charge to the jury, in refusing to charge as requested, and that the judgment is contrary to the law and the evidence. I must-briefly refer to a portion of the testimony.

Weitz was engaged in carrying on a grocery store in'Cleveland from March 1 to October 9, 1890 — about six months. He had purchased a small stock of goods from the former occupant of the same room, and before doing so he called Upon Wentiams and consulted them about the value of the stock which he subsequently purchased. It appears further that before he made any purchase of goods of Wenhams, they inquired what means he h?d to conduct business, and he said he had about $650 in money of his own, and could borrow about $350. It is ad[564]*564mitted lie purchased goods of Wenhams up to the time of the assignment. The aggregate amount purchased was about $1,400. This was paid except $500, at the time he made the assignment. He also owed his father-in-law $250, as he says, for which he, on the day before the assignment, executed a mortgage. He says he also owed another man $100, for which a mortgage was delivered.

When the Wenhams instituted their action in replevin, and the constable took possession of the store in the presence of two clerks of the Wenhams and another party, they took the goods claimed to belong to the Wenhams, and removed them to Wenhams’ store, and there appraised or invoiced them.

The question arose on the trial as to how the valuation should have Deen made. The contention of defendant was that they ought to have been appraised at what they were worth at retail in the store; the other side insisting that was not the rule. It seems that the wholesale profit is about 8 per cent, the retail about 15 to 18 per cent.

This question was put to a witness: “You may describe to. the jury the character and condition of the goods.” And the witness proceeds to do this and says : “ I don’t think they were worth over 50 per cent or 60 per cent of the original wholesale price.”

It is said the rule must be what the goods were worth to Weitz in his store. We understand this to be the rule: It is the market value all the time. They were not worth to him the retail price until he had sold them at the retail price. The goods were only worth to him what he could go into the market and buy the same kind of goods for and place them on his shelves. It is all the time the market value at the time and place named that must determine the value.

The important legal question discussed was this: What is the rule when' goods are intermingled? An innocent party if he cannot separate his goods from’ those with which they have been wrongfully mingled, can he take all the goods so; mixed and intermingled ? What is the rule, even though one of the parties might' be a wrong-doer? In 107 Mass., 123, from the syllabus : “ If a mortgagor of goods mixes them, purposely or carelessly, with his own, and sells the whole, the mortgagee can replevy the whole from the purchaser in the absence of evidence to dis^ tinguish the mortgaged goods from those not mortgaged.”

In 30 N. J. Equity, 291, Jewett, Receiver, v. Dringer & Bowman, this is the first proposition of the syllabus: “ If a party having charge of the property of others so confounds it with his own that the line of distinction cannot be traced, all the inconvenience of the confusion is thrown upon the party who produced it, and it is for him to distinguish his own property or lose it.” That seems to me to be a reasonable rule.

In 50 American Decisions, 627, Hasseltine v. Stockwell, the syllabus is as follows • “ Confusion of goods has taken place when there has been such an inter-mixture of goods owned by different persons that the property of each can no longer be distinguished.” And again > “ But there is no forfeiture where the admixture has been made without fraud, nor even in case of fraudulent intermixture where the goods mixed are of equal value. In the latter case each owner takes Ms proportion of the whole.”

In the 54th American Decisions, 582, it is said: “ Confusion of goods is such a mixture of the goods of two or more persons that they cannot be distinguished.”

And on page 591, “the civil law gave the whole property to the party who made the intermixture; but he remained liable in damages for the value of the goods taken to the party whose goods he had intermingled with his own. Here is a manifest encouragement of fraud, and the common law rule was directly llie contrary , and gave the whole property to him whose property was first invaded, without any compensation to the wrong-doer. The severity of this rule has been modified, and it is now the rule that even where the mixture is wrongful and fraudulent, yet if the mass is composed of parts which are of equal quality and value, and if the proportion of the whole which each party originally owned is [565]*565known, the parties will be tenants in common, and each will be entitled to bis proportion. But although the tenancy in common is conceded to exist here, the rights of the parties are by no means equal. Every intendment and presumption is against the wrong-doer. The burden of proof is upon him to establish his right, otherwise, the innocent party, who is to be protected at all events, will take the whole of the inseparable mass.”

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Related

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107 Mass. 123 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weitz-v-wenham-ohcirctcuyahoga-1895.