Bode v. Lee
Bode v. Lee
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs were the proprietors of a bonded warehouse in San Francisco, and had one R. P. Scott in their employ as foreman or manager of the warehouse. In February, 1886, they discovered that Scott had been unfaithful to his trust for a number of years, and had privately and corruptly sold various articles of merchandise that had been stored in their warehouse. A portion of the merchandise so sold by him consisted of boxes of sheet tin, which were purchased by the defendants, and upon the discovery of the fact the plaintiffs brought this action to recover from the defendants the value of the tin thus received by them. The complaint alleges the character of the business conducted by the plaintiffs, the relation held to them by Scott, the knowledge of these facts by the defendants, and that with such knowledge the defendants had conspired and confederated with Scott, for the purpose of wronging and defrauding the plaintiffs out of these boxes of tin, and had procured Scott to fraudulently remove them from the warehouse at divers times within the four years last past, and, as a consideration therefor, had paid him for said property a sum of money greatly below its market value, with the knowledge that he had fraudulently obtained the property as the employee of the plaintiffs, and had thus stolen and embezzled it; that in pursuance of said conspiracy the defendants had come into the possession of sixteen hundred and twenty-six boxes of tin, of which the plaintiffs were entitled to the immediate possession, and for the value of which
1. An appeal from an order granting or denying a new trial does not involve any consideration of the correctness of the judgment. That question can be determined only by an appeal from the judgment itself. The motion for a new trial is in the nature of a distinct proceeding, and is to be heard upon an independent record distinct from the record upon which the judgment depends. In the present case this record consists of a statement of the case prepared after the trial. Upon the hearing of this motion reference may be had to the pleadings (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 660), but the correctness of the order must be determined by the record upon which it rests. This “ reference” to the
2. It is strenuously urged by the appellants that the plaintiffs were limited at the trial to establishing a single conversion of tin, and could not introduce testimony in support of their complaint, showing that the tin for-fhich they sued had been received by the defendants at different times. Without determining whether this objection should not have been taken by special demurrer to the complaint, upon the ground of uncertainty, we think that the appellants should at least have made this ground a special objection at the trial, when the evidence was offered. Such evidence cannot be regarded in any other light than as a variance from the allegations of the complaint, and it is very evident from the record in this case that the defendants were not misled by its introduction. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 469.) If the objection had been made when the evidence was presented the plaintiffs might have amended their complaint. The defendants, however, did not make this objection to any evidence of this character which was offered by the plaintiffs, and, in fact, this evidence was first brought to the notice of the jury, in the cross-examination by the defendants of one of the plaintiffs who was testifying as a witness in his own behalf. While the plaintiff Searle was being examined with reference to the shortage in the tin in the warehouse, he stated in reply to a question by the defendants’ counsel, that there was more than one party short of tin in
3. Much of the argument of counsel has been directed to the question of the statute of limitations, the appellants claiming that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover for any tin that was abstracted from the plaintiffs’ warehouse prior to three years before the commencement of this action. The sufficiency of the complaint in this respect is extensively discussed, but, as we are not at liberty to pass upon that question on this appeal, it is unnecessary to consider this part of the argument. This defense was pleaded in the answer; and at one stage of the trial, in answer to the following question put to one of the defendants: “ In those transactions did the name of the Greenwich Dock Bonded Warehouse, or of Bode and Searle, appear upon any of the writings connected with them” ? the defendants objected that the plaintiffs “ have no right to prove that we got any tin previous to the three years to the commencement of this suit. Action is barred upon all received before that time.” This witness did not, however, give testimony that the defendants had received
4. The court instructed the jury that the plaintiffs, in order to recover, must show that Scott sold to the defendants the identical tin for which they sought judgment in this action, and the appellants urge that this instruction was disregarded by the jury; that the evidence fails to show that the tin for which the plaintiffs were short in their warehouse, and for which they settled with their bailors, was ever received by the defendants' from Scott. Naturally the evidence to connect the. defendants with the shortage of the tin in the ware
5. There are certain specifications of errors of law in the admission of evidence, and in refusing certain instructions which were asked by the defendants, but they are not of a character to require comment. The substance of the instructions thus refused which xvere proper to be given had already been given to the jury in other language, and the evidence which was received against the objections of the defendants could not have' changed the result. The case seems to have been fully and carefully tried upon its merits. A great deal of evidence upon the various issues was introduced by the respective parties, and submitted to the jury, with
The order is affirmed.
McFarland, J., Fitzgerald, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- GEORGE C. BODE v. JOHN LEE
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- 21 cases
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- Appeal—New-trial Order—Review of Judgment.—An appeal from an order granting or denying a new trial does not involve a review of the judgment, the correctness of which can be determined only by an appeal therefrom. ' Id.—Motion For New Trial—Independent Record—Reference to Pleadings—Sufficiency of Pleadings Not Involved.—The motion for a new trial, which is in the nature of a distinct proceeding, is to be heard upon an independent record, distinct from the record upon which the judgment depends; and reference may be had to the pleadings in the record for the purpose of ascertaining the issues in the case, and determining the correctness of the rulings of the court as to the relevancy of evidence; but whether the complaint is sufficient to support the judgment, or whether the court erred in overruling a demurrer to the complaint, are matters not involved upon the motion for a new trial, and can be considered only upon an appeal from the judgment. Id.—Objection Upon Appeal For First Time—Fraudulent Conversion of Goods—Objection to Evidence—Variance.—In an action by the proprietors of a bonded warehouse for the conversion of numerous boxes of tin, which the defendants are alleged to have fraudulently obtained by conspiracy with an employee of the plaintiffs, the fraudulent conversion being alleged to have occurred between two dates a number of years apart, an objection that the plaintiffs were limited at the trial to establishing a single conversion of tin, and could not introduce testimony in support of their complaint showing that the tin for which they sued had been received by the defendants at different times, is in the nature of an objection to evidence on the ground of variance from the allegations of the complaint, and it appearing that the defendants were not misled by the evidence, and failed to raise any objection at the trial, such objection cannot be considered upon appeal for the first time. Bailment—Warehouse — Embezzlement — Fraudulent Conspiracies — Conversion of Property of Several Bailors—Single Cause of Action—Objection to Evidence.—The proprietors of a bonded warehouse, who are the bailees of boxes of tin left in the warehouse by several different bailors, have a single cause of action to recover for fraudulent conversion of the tin by persons obtaining it through embezzlement by an employee of the warehouse, with whom they had conspired for the purchase of the tin, and it is immaterial to the defendants sued for such conversion whether the plaintiffs were the bailees of one or more bailors; and an objection to the evidence of the entire conversion, upon the ground that the plaintiffs have as many causes of action as there were bailors, and should have stated them separately, is not tenable. Id:—Statute of Limitations—Admissibility of Evidence—List Made by Defendant—Items Barred.—Where one of the defendants, in connection with his testimony, presented a statement, or list of items, from the books of the defendants, which had been prepared at the instance of the witness, and was produced by him for the purpose of showing the nature of the transactions between the defendants and the employee of the plaintiff, the list produced is not rendered inadmissible by reason of its containing entries of transactions that had occurred more than three years before the commencement of the action; and an objection on the part of the defendants to that portion of the list, upon the ground that no recovery could be had for it, and that it is barred by the statute of limitations, is properly overruled. Id.—Interwoven Transactions—Dependent Facts—Instruction as to Statute of Limitations.—When a cause of action depends upon a series of continued transactions, which are so interwoven that the evidence cannot be limited to a particular point of time, or when the sufficiency of the defense of the statute of limitations depends upon the establishment of other facts at the trial, an objection to a piece of evidence on the ground that it relates to a transaction claimed to he barred by limitation is unavailing; and the proper practice in such cases is to allow the evidence to go before the jury; and to have them properly instructed with reference to the statute of limitations and its application to the facts of the case before them. Id.—Fraudulent Purchase From Embezzling Employee—Identity of Goods Purchased—Burden of Proof.—Where there is evidence tending to show that the defendants were not entirely innocent in their dealings with the employee of the plaintiffs who embezzled the tin bought by the defendants, the burden is thrown upon the defendants to show that the tin thus purchased was not a portion of that for which the plaintiffs proved that they found a shortage in their warehouse, and settled with their bailors.