Salley v. Parker
Salley v. Parker
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is a lawsuit about a cooking stove. It arose out of these circumstances: The plaintiff became a tenant of a dwelling house which was owned by Dent. She had vacated the house, but left behind her the stove. She returned to get the stove and was forbidden to do so by Geiger, who seized it for an alleged balance of rent due by the plaintiff. For this act of alleged conversion the former tenant sued both Parker and Geiger, and had a verdict for both actual and punitive damages.
The exceptions made four questions: (1) There was no proof of conversion; (2) wrong instructions about how agency may be proven; (3) there was no proof of wilfulness, and, therefore, no basis for punitive damages; (4) wrong instructions about the service of a distress warrant.
The circumstances suggest that Geiger was agent of Parker. The testimony tends to prove that Parker let the house to Mrs. Salley and collected the rents; that Parker filled out *112 the distress warrant and sent it to Dent to sign; that the signed warrant was returned to Parker to be put into Geiger’s hands, and was left at Coker’s place for Geiger; that Parker talked to Geiger about the stove; that Parker told Coker he was holding the stove for rent due, and declined to give it up until payment was made.
The remedy by distress was provided by the common law. The statutes have only modified the remedy. 3 Kent, p. 472, et seq.
“A warrant of distress is nothing but a power of attorney. The bailiff, or other person executing the warrant, is only the agent of the landlord.” Bagwell v. Jamison, Cheves 252.
It was the duty of Geiger to have made proof of his agency when he went to act. He knew that, for he swore he had and presented the warrant; but Mrs. Salley denied so much.
By the defendant’s testimony the warrant was made out by Parker, signed by the landlord, Dent, and put into Geiger’s hand to execute.
The statute law does not declare that the warrant shall be presented to the tenant (the same thing as service) ; but the *113 warrant is the only evidence of the agent’s right, and the agent is bound to show his right to justify his act.
Judgment reversed as to punitive damages and affirmed as to actual damages.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Salley v. Parker Et Al.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Landlord and Tenant — Wrongful Distress. — A landlord, who took a stove of a tenant for rent, when the tenant in fact owed no rent was guilty of conversion. 2. Principal and Agent — Relation-—Proof.—Agency may be proven by circumstances. 3. Principal and Agent — Conversion — Agency — Proof. — In action against two persons for conversion, evidence held sufficient to sustain a finding that one of defendants who took the property was the agent of the other defendant. 4. Landlord and Tenant — Wrongful Distress — Punitive Damages.— In an action against a landlord for conversion of a stove which a tenant had left on the premises, where landlord did nothing beyond asserting his right to hold the stove, punitive damages were improperly allowed. 5. Landlord and Tenant — Distress — Necessity for Warrant. — One acting for landlord in taking property of a tenant for rent must have a distress warrant to evidence his authority when he takes the property.