Gillis v. M'Kinney
Gillis v. M'Kinney
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action is assumpsit, instituted in the court below by the plaintiff in error to recover from the defendant the value of a quantity of lumber taken and disposed of by the latter, which the former alleges belonged to him. It appears from the evidence that they were tenants in common of a tract of land on which there were a saw-mill and some other buildings; that they let the property to a man of the name of Mead on shares; that is, Mead was to give the plaintiff and defendant one-half, or each one-fourth of all the lumber he should saw at the mill. He continued to occupy the property and saw lumber at the mill from the autumn of 1839 till some time in 1841. In the spring of 1840, all the lumber sawed at the mill, and coming to the plaintiff and the defendant as their proportion, was taken away and disposed of by the defendant, under an agreement that the plaintiff should have an equal quantity at the mill for it in the spring of 1841. The defendant, however, according to the evidence, instead of leaving such equal quantity for the plaintiff at the mill in the
The court below, after the evidence was closed on both sides, at the instance of the counsel for the defendant, charged the jury, that as the evidence on the part of the plaintiff showed that he and the defendant were tenants in common of the land and the sawmill, assumpsit would not lie for the plaintiff’s claim; to which the plaintiff’s counsel excepted, and have assigned the same for error here.
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff went clearly to show an agreement of the defendant, that, if the plaintiff’s agent (the plaintiff himself being absent in the State of New York) would permit the defendant to take away and dispose of, for his own use, all the lumber at the mill in the spring of 1840 belonging to both of them, he, the defendant, would leave an equal quantity for the plaintiff at the mill in the spring of 1841; and that the defendant under this agreement took the lumber, amounting in all to about 113,000 feet; and that instead of leaving any lumber for the plaintiff at the mill in the spring of 1841, he took all that was coming to them from Mead, the tenant, and disposed of it. Now, if the jury should have believed the evidence going to establish these facts, there can be no doubt but the plaintiff was entitled to maintain this action on the ground that the defendant had broken his promise and engagement made with the plaintiff in the most express terms. But suppose there had been no express engagement of the kind, but that the defendant had taken all the lumber coming from Mead to him and the plaintiff as rent, and sold it; he would unquestionably have been accountable to the plaintiff for his proportion of it, in assumpsit for money had and received. If the rent had been payable in money, and the whole of it had been received by the defendant, it will, I apprehend, strike the mind of every one, at the first blush, that assumpsit for money had and received would lie against him by the plaintiff to recover his proportion. But the circumstance of its being payable in lumber can make no difference after the defendant had converted it into money. It might as well be said that one of two joint obligees, who receives the whole amount of the bond, would not be liable in an action of assumpsit to his co-obligee for his proportion of it, as that a co-lessor, who receives the whole of the rent, is not liable to his co-lessor for his proportion of it in an action of assumpsit. In Coles v. Coles, (15 Johns. 159), it was held, that if two tenants in common sell the common property, and one of them receives the whole
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Gillis against M'Kinney
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- 11 cases
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- Published