Wilson Cypress Co. v. Logan

162 So. 489, 120 Fla. 124
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 19, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 162 So. 489 (Wilson Cypress Co. v. Logan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson Cypress Co. v. Logan, 162 So. 489, 120 Fla. 124 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Ellis, P. J.

Frank H. Logan sued Wilson Cypress Company and C. W. Newman in an action for the wrongful conversion of cypress logs cut and removed from the plaintiff’s land in Lake County, Florida. It was alleged that the value of the property was fifteen hundred dollars. The declaration was filed in October, 1931.

In June, 1932, the court by order allowed the plaintiff to amend his praecipe for summons and declaration by alleging the sum of $3,500.00 as the value of the logs on the basis of $25.00 per thousand feet board measure instead of .$10.00 per thousand feet. Pleas of not guilty were separately interposed by Wilson Cypress Company and C. W. Newman.

There was a verdict for the plaintiff against the defendants jointly in the sum of $1,844.52, and judgment was entered for that sum against the defendants, to which they took a writ of error.

*126 The declaration is in the statutory form for wrongful conversion of goods. See Section 4314, par. 26, C. G. L. 1927.

It is not alleged that the defendants are partners, but they were charged upon a joint liability for the wrongful conversion to their own use of the plaintiffs’ cypress logs, or the wrongful deprivation of the plaintiff of the use and possession of them.

In the case of Marx Bros. v. Culpepper & Dupont, 40 Fla. 322, 24 South. Rep. 59, in an opinion by Mr. Justice Mabry the principle was announced that when a joint liability is alleged against two or more defendants it may be sustained by proof of such liability without reference to a partnership relation, or by showing such relation without alleging it in the declaration. That action was one in assumpsit for goods sold and delivered by plaintiff to defendants.

In the case of Peacock v. Feaster, 51 Fla. 269, 40 South. Rep. 74, which was an action of trover, the court, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Shackleford, applied the same principle, saying, “ ‘Where there is more than one defendant in an action of trover, one or more defendants may be acquitted and a verdict and judgment taken against the others, the verdict and judgment being shaped so as to hold liable those only who are shown by the evidence to have been guilty of conversion.’ 21 Ency. PL & Pr. 1124; Dicey’s Parties to Actions, Rule 98, marginal page 431. It would seem clear that under the plea of not guilty interposed by the defendants on the 6th day of February, 1905, either defendant could have introduced any competent evidence at the trial tending to show his non-liability, and that the other pleas filed by them were unnecessary, even if in proper form.”

*127 In each case the defendants were alleged to be partners, but the relation affected only the probative force of the evidence introduced to establish the joint liability. In the case of assumpsit the relation established the joint liability while in the action of trover either defendant might by evidence show his non-liability notwithstanding the relation.

The essential elements of a conversion is a wrongful deprivation of property to the owner. See West Yellow Pine Co. v. Stephens, 80 Fla. 298, 86 South. Rep. 241. In that case the court quoted as follows: “Where there is a taking of chattels with intent to exercise over them an ownership inconsistent with the real owner’s right of possession, there is a conversion”; that “conversion takes place when the trespasser, at the place where it lay when the tree is cut or elsewhere, assumes dominion over the timber that is inconsistent with the rights of the true owner. * * * This view is not inconsistent with the decision on the facts in the cases of Moody v. Caulk, 14 Fla. 50; Skinner v. Pinney, 19 Fla. 42; Wright v. Skinner, 34 Fla. 453, 16 South. 335. Peacock v. Feaster, 51 Fla. 269, 40 South. 74; Robinson v. Hartridge, 13 Fla. 501.”

The action brought in this case is the remedy provided by statute to recover the value of personal property converted by the defendants to their own use. It is an action against the defendants jointly but not as partners. To hold them jointly each must be shown to have been guilty of a conversion either by agreement among them or each acting separately in such manner as to show that the act of each was the exercise or the assumption of dominion over the property unauthorized by the rightful owner.

A taking with intent to exercise an ownership inconsistent with the owner’s right of possession is a conversion. *128 See Quitman Naval Stores Co. v. Conway, 63 Fla. 253, 58 South. Rep. 840; West Yellow Pine Co. v. Stephens, supra.

The element of trespass is not involved in this case. The going upon the land and cutting the timber is not an element in this proceeding. Quitman Naval Stores Co. v. Conway, supra.

As said in the last cited case, the trespass, the going upon the land and cutting the timber, is disregarded in this action. It is the appropriation of the cut timber, the assumption of dominion over it which is inconsistent with the rights of the true owner. Each defendant must be shown to have exercised in co-operation with the other, or independently, such unauthorized dominion over the property.

The point is clearly elucidated by Mr. Justice Wescott speaking for the court in Robinson v. Hartridge, supra. The facts in the case were in substance as follows: Hart-ridge bought twelve bales of cotton from Griffin of Lake City. Eight of the bales were shipped and Hartridge sold them in New York through his factor at a satisfactory price. Griffin said that he shipped the remaining four bales to Hartridge, but the latter never received them. Robinson of Jacksonville was also receiving consignments of cotton. Among other bales of cotton he received four bales which he could not account for, having no advices concerning them. Through some inadvertence or carelessness on the part of his employees those four bales were included in a shipment of cotton by Robinson to New York and sold for his account afterwards.

It was discovered that the four bales of cotton belonged to Hartridge, and Robinson agreed to pay Hartridge for them when the account sales was received. When the account sales was'received Hartridge was dissatisfied with the price and brought his action against Robinson in trover for *129 the conversion, although Robinson had paid Hartridge $100.00 on account. • Hartridge obtained a verdict and Robinson took an appeal under the practice then existing.

The judgment was reversed, Mr. Justice Wescott speaking as follows upon the point:

“Neither a naked possession nor every asportation accompanied with a recognition of the title of the true owner, and which is not to interfere with the dominion of the true owner over the chattel, constitutes a conversion; but ‘any asportation of a chattel for the use of the defendant or a third person amounts to a conversion, for the simple reason that it is an act inconsistent with the general right of dominion which the owner of a chattel has in it, who is entitled to the use of it at all times and in all places.’ 8 Meeson & Welsby, 547. In this case the sending of the cotton to the vessel and authorizing its being placed in the hold, was made with the impression that it was a consignment.

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 489, 120 Fla. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-cypress-co-v-logan-fla-1935.