Huning v. Chavez
Huning v. Chavez
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff below, defendant here, by his declaration, seeks to recover for the wrongful taking of three thousand, one hundred head of sheep by defendant, and asks damages in the sum of $6,000. Defendant below, plaintiff here, pleads the general issue. Verdict for plaintiff. Damages, $4,589.50, being in full for all the sheep at $1.25 per head. Plaintiff in error assigns many errors, but relies upon failure of court to instruct upon the question of mitigation of damages upon evidence under the general issue, as well as refusal to instruct" upon the special pleas, and as to special interest of defendant in error, and in mitigation of damages under special pleas.
It is claimed that plaintiff was not obliged to go to Los Lunas after his sheep, but that it was the duty of defendant °to return them to the place from whence taken. This may be true. It may be that defendant should be compelled to pay for the additional damage done by his failure to so return the sheep; but the sheep having commingled, it being necessary to separate them, does not the fact that plaintiff failed to take any steps whatsoever to regain the property himself, but calmly waited until the general owner made a demand upon defendant, show an implied assent, at least, to the taking by Lewis? In Montgomery v. Wilson, 48 Vt. 616, it was held that where defendants had driven off plaintiff’s cattle, and, while in their possession, the same were seized by attachment, defendants were only responsible for damages up to the time of such seizure, although the attaching officer may not have afterward proceeded legally with the property. In trespass de bonis asportatis, the defendant may prove in mitigation of damages that the goods did not belong to the plaintiff, and that they have gone to the use of the owner, although, in taking them, the defendant acted without authority. Squire v. Hollenbeck, 9 Pick. 551; also, City of Lowell v. Parker, 10 Metc. (Mass.) 309; Kaley v. Shed, Id. 317. This doctrine is recognized and affirmed in Criner v. Pike, 2 Head (Tenn.), 401. The true rule would seem to be that where a stranger to the title seeks, in mitigation of damages, to show that the owner has the property, he must also show that he acted in good faith, or at least that he was not in collusion with the owner to forcibly deprive the person in possession of the property. Certainly, it should be for the jury to decide whether he has shown this; and, if so, then his defense should be considered in mitigation, particularly when it is shown, as in this case, that the trespasser was seeking to recover his own property upon a common grazing ground, and that the trespass was necessarily committed in so recovering his own. Of course, the aggravation, or increase of damages by the taking of the sheep to Los Lunas instead of Pa Jarito or Isleta, was for the jury to consider; but we can not agree with the defendant in error that the instructions given on his behalf (numbers 3 and 5), and of the court’s motion (numbers 2, 3, and 4), embodied the law, as applicable to this cause. The court erred in giving the instructions named above, and further erred in refusing to give the instructions asked by the defendant. It is admitted by counsel that the record here showing instruction number 5 given of court’s motion, identical with number 2 asked by defendant below, is erroneous, and that said instruction was not given, but refused. Defendant in error contends that the instructions given by the court were not excepted to as a whole. The record shows that each was excepted to. Defendant in error further contends that seriatim exceptions should have been taken to the refusal to give instructions asked by the defendant. The law of this territory requires that the court should instruct the jury as to all the law of the case; but it is not necessary for us to go further, as the instructions asked and refused embodied the law, as we find it applicable to the case before us, as far as they went. The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LUIS HUNING, in Error v. NICODEMUS CHAVEZ, in Error
- Status
- Published