Tsuru v. Bayer
Tsuru v. Bayer
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
This is an action for damages for the alleged conversion by the defendants of certain personal property owned by the plaintiff. The action was instituted in the circuit court of the fifth judicial circuit, trial being had before a jury, and at the conclusion of the introduction of the evidence and on motion of the defendants the court directed a verdict for the defendants and the plaintiff now brings the case up on a bill of exceptions.
The principal ground relied upon in the bill of exceptions and the only question necessary to be considered here challenges the propriety of the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the defendants. From the record it appears that the plaintiff Ishii Tsurn was engaged in conducting a Japanese boarding-house at Makaweli, Island of Kauai, in buildings owned by the Hawaiian Sugar Company, Limited, one of the defendants. On or about the 19th day of August, 1919, the plaintiff suddenly departed from the Island of Kauai, proceeding directly to Honolulu where she remained for about three weeks. The morning
In actions of trover the general rule recognized by all the authorities is that where the original taking is lawful and there has been no illegal assumption of ownership or illegal user a demand and refusal must be shown as evidence of a disposition to convert to the holder’s own
There is some evidence in this case which indicates that the defendants in the first instance assumed that the property had been abandoned by the plaintiff. This, however, is denied by the plaintiff. ’ Of course if the plaintiff did in fact abandon the property the status of the case might be altered, but whether or not there was an abandonment, the evidence thereof being conflicting, was a question for the jury under proper instructions of the court.
Counsel for appellees have cited a number of authorities applying the rule in respect to property which has been pledged or pawned. These authorities we think have no application to the question now before us. The de
We think that under the circumstances of this case as divulged by the record the original taking of the property by the defendants was rightful and proper, but clearly the subsequent sale of the property was unauthorized and amounted to a tortious conversion of it and that thereupon a cause of action for damages immediately accrued to the plaintiff and no subsequent act of the defendants other than the payment of the damages sustained could defeat the action.
While it does not appear from the record before us that defendants returned or offered to return the property to plaintiff it may be said that where a party wrongfully converts the property of another it is not put in his power by merely restoring the property to the owner to escape liability for the tort committed. As a general rule an offer to return property wrongfully converted is not admissible even in mitigation of damages, but where the conversion is technical, inadvertent or the result of a mistake and the property is still in status quo an offer to return it may be shown in mitigation of damages. McGraw v. Sampliner, 107 Mich. 141; Plummer v. Reeves, 102 S. W. 376. And see Gilbert & Miller v. Peck, 43 Mo. Ap. 577, where the rule is fully discussed and the authorities reviewed. In this class of cases the measure of damages ordinarily would be the fair reasonable value of the property at the time of the conversion. If the plaintiff has accepted an offer to return the property and has assumed control of it this would not bar an action for conversion but would mitigate the damages and fix the measure
In this case we think it not unlikely that the court below confused the law of replevin with the law applicable to a case of conversion.
Where the wrongful conversion of the property of another has once been shown no demand is necessary to sustain an action therefor and to hold otherwise would be to rewrite the law of conversion and to depart entirely from a fundamental rule recognized and applied by every authority dealing with the subject.
The verdict and judgment herein are set aside and the cause is remanded to the court below for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ISHII TSURU v. C. BAYER AND HAWAIIAN SUGAR COMPANY, LIMITED
- Cited By
- 22 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Trover and Conversion — demand when necessary. In actions of trover the general rule recognized by all of the authorities is that where the original taking is lawful and there has been no illegal assumption of ownership or illegal user a demand and refusal, must be shown as evidence of a disposition to convert to the holder’s own use or to divest the true owner of his property. Same — demand when not necessary. Where the taking itself is wrongful or where there is an illegal assumption of ownership or an illegal user a demand and refusal need not be proved. Same — conversion defined. Any distinct act of dominion wrongfully exerted over one’s property in denial of his right or inconsistent with it is a conversion. Same — trover and replevin distinguished. In the common law action of trover the plaintiff seeks solely the recovery of damages for the conversion of his property and the action is thus distinguishable from an action of replevin in which the primary relief sought is recovery of the specific property in question though by statute damages based on the value of the property, if its return cannot be obtained, may be recovered. Same — effect of return or offer to return property. As a general rule an offer to return property wrongfully converted is not admissible even in mitigation of damages, but where the conversion is technical, inadvertent or the result of a mistake and the property is still in status quo an offer to return it may be shown in mitigation of damages. Same — measure of damages. In this class of cases the measure of damages ordinarily would be the fair reasonable value of the property at the time of the conversion. If the plaintiff has accepted the return of the property this would not bar an action for conversion but would mitigate the damages and fix the measure thereof at the reasonable value of the property at the time of the conversion less its value when returned.