Valentine v. Duff
Valentine v. Duff
Opinion of the Court
The appellants brought this action to recover the value of personal property alleged to have been converted by appellees to their own use.
Trial by the court, and, by request, the court made a special finding of the facts with conclusions of law thereon.
Three errors are assigned in this court, but in present
Counsel for the appellants insists that the complaint is a joint one against all of the defendants, and that if they were not entitled to recover against all of the defendants, they could not recover at all. While we do not concur in this view of the appellants’ rights under the complaint, we will accept his theory for the purposes of this case.
This action was commenced in April, 1891. The court finds as a fact that the wheat alleged to have been converted by the defendants to their own use was raised by the defendant Walle, on lands belonging to the plaintiffs, he being tbeir tenant, and was the share of the wheat assigned and set off to them by said Walle as such tenant; that the plaintiffs and one Stryker both claimed to be the owners of the wheat, and, to settle the question of such ownership, the plaintiffs, in January, 1891, recovered a judgment in replevin against said Stryker and Walle “for the recovery of the wheat, or in lieu thereof a judgment against Walle for the value of the wheat;” that pending the replevin suit, Walle, the agent of Stryker, hauled the wheat and stored it in the barn of the defendant Fulmer; that the defendant Schall, “as an employe of the said Stryker, ’ ’■ hauled the wheat from Fulmer’s barn to the elevator of the defendant Caffyn, and sold it to the defendant Duff, as the agent of Caffyn.
The court finds that the defendant Fulmer received no part of the consideration for the wheat, and had no knowledge of the controversy between the plaintiffs and Stryker and Walle. The fact that the wheat was stored by Walle in Fulmer’s barn does not show a conversion by Fulmer. The truth is, Fulmer, as found by the
As to whether or not,, upon the facts found, the appellants were entitled to recover from part of the appellees, we need not consider, for the reason that the insistence of counsel is that if appellants were not entitled to a judgment against all of the appellees, they were entitled to no judgment at all.
The contention, therefore, of appellants, that they were entitled to judgment against . the appellees Fulmer, Sehall and Duff we can not concur in.
No other objection having been pointed out, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
070rehearing
On Petition for a Rehearing.
The appellants seek a rehearing and ask to withdraw a part of their original brief, insisting that the court is in error in its views of their contention.
Whether or not we have placed the wrong construction upon the argument of counsel need not be decided, as the original opinion states the law so far as applicable to the rights of the appellees, Fulmer, Sehall and DufE, in
The facts in this case fall short of showing a conversion by the appellee, Caffyn.
Petition overruled.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion.
I am compelled to believe that, considering all of appellants’ brief, he should not be held to have waived the determination of the question of whether a case is made against some one of the appellees who recovered below, even if not against all, and that this question should therefore be examined and decided.
Filed March 1, 1893.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.