Lacey v. Beaudry
California Supreme Court
Lacey v. Beaudry, 53 Cal. 693 (Cal. 1879)
Lacey v. Beaudry
Opinion of the Court
Without considering the defective averments of the complaint, it is enough to say that among the many errors occurring at the trial, one of the most prominent was the giving of the second instruction requested by plaintiff, which was to the effect that the defendant Beaudry, by the mere “ issuance and service ” of an injunction, converted to his own use certain property on premises then in the possession of the present plaintiff.
Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial. Bemittitur forthwith.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SIDNEY LACEY v. PRUDENT BEAUDRY
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Conversion of Property by Injunction—Erroneous Instruction.—L, as tenant of B, placed certain fixtures upon the real estate of B, and B subsequently sued out an injunction to prevent L from removing the fixtures. Upon a showing by L the injunction was dissolved, and thereafter L sued B for damages caused by the injunction. At the trial the Court instructed the jury that the mere issuance and service of the injunction was a conversion of the fixtures by B: held, that the instruction was erroneous.—[Beporter.]