Trentman v. Wiley , 85 Ind. 33 ( 1882 )


Menu:
  • Best, C.

    The appellees sued the appellants upon an undertaking in attachment, alleging in their complaint, in substance, that appellants executed said bond, caused a writ of attachment to issue thereon, by virtue of which a stock of goods of the value of $2,000, belonging to the appellees, was attached, sold and otherwise disposed of, whereby the same was wholly lost to the appellees; that they were put to $300 expense in defending said attachment proceedings, and that a judgment was finally rendered for them therein.

    A demurrer to the complaint by appellants for the want of facts was overruled, and an answer of five paragraphs was filed. A demurrer was sustained to the second, third and fifth, and a reply was filed to the fourth paragraph of the answer.

    The issues thus formed were tried by a jury, and a verdict, with answers to interrogatories, was returned for $900. The appellants moved for a new trial and for judgment upon the answers to interrogatories. These motions were overruled,, and final judgment rendered upon the verdict.

    *35These various rulings are assigned as error, and will be considered in their order.

    The objections ui’ged to the comjfiaint are, that there is no. averment that an affidavit was filed in the attachment proceedings; there is none that the writ was delivered to the proper officer; nor is there any that the goods were sold by any person having authority.

    These averments were unnecessary. The averment is that appellants caused the goods to be seized, and this was sufficient to show that they were liable for the loss of them, if the proceedings were wrongful. Nor was it necessary to allege that an affidavit had been filed in the attachment proceeding. The appellees were not required to prove that fact, nor would the want of one be any defence, and hence an averment upon that subject was wholly unnecessary. The complaint was sufficient, and the demurrer properly overruled.

    The second paragraph of the answer averred that-after the goods were attached the shcrifi' applied to the court for an order to sell them as perishable property; that the court, without objection from the appellees, ordered them sold, and the sheriff, in pursuance of such order, sold them for $110.95; that the appellees have never demanded the money of the sheriff, and that said proceedings were not wrongful.

    The judgment in. the attachment proceedings against the appellants concludes them upon the question as to whether the writ was rightfully or wrongfully issued, and hence the last averment in this paragraph-of the answer adds nothing to it. The other facts constituted no defence. The averment that the order was made without objection is not equivalent to an averment that the sale of the appellee’s goods was made with their consent. The goods having been wrongfully taken, the sale of them as perishable property,’in pursuance of the statute, in no manner exonerated the appellants from liability for such damages as their wrong occasioned. The facts alleged constituted no defence, and the demurrer was properly sustained.

    The fifth paragraph of the answer alleged, in substance, *36that the appellees had purchased said stock of goods of the :appellant Trentman, and, at the time said attachment proceed- . ings were instituted, the appellees were selling said goods for the purpose of cheating and defrauding said appellant and .their other creditors, and that, by reason of such facts, said ■proceedings were not wrongfully, but rightfully, instituted.

    What we said in disposing of the latter part of the second paragraph of the answer disposes of this paragraph. The appellants can not, in this suit, allege that the writ of attachment was rightfully issued. That fact was adjudged against them an the other suit. They insist, however, that it does not appear from the complaint that the judgment was upon the merits, “and, in such case, they may show that the attachment was •rightfully issued. We think it does so appear, but if it did :not the appellees would, nevertheless, be entitled to such dam.ages as they had sustained, and, as this paragraph, alleged no fact in bar of the action, it was insufficient. The demurrer was properly sustained.

    This brings us to the motion for a new trial. It embraced many reasons. Those that are noticed in appellants’ brief will alone be considered.

    The first is that the court erred in instructing the jury orally, ■after it had been requested at the proper time to instruct in writing. Such a request was made, and, after the written instructions were read to the jury, the court said to them that the defendants had furnished certain interrogatories which they were required to answer and return with their general ver'dict; that he, the judge, had drawn pencil marks across some of them, and that they need not answer them; that he had drawn a mark across one numbered 45, by mistake, and that they should answer that one; that plaintiffs’ counsel have noted their objections to these interrogatories, but that they should not regard such objections.

    These statements were not instructions, within the meaning 0f the law. McCallister v. Mount, 73 Ind. 559.

    The appellants requested the court to charge the jury that *37if the sheriff obtained an order to sell the property attached, as perishable property, without objection from the appellees,., and in pursuance of such order sold it, the price for which it. sold was the measure of damages.

    This instruction was properly refused. The appellees were-not limited in their recovery to the amount for which the-property sold." Stott v. Harrison, 73 Ind. 17; Smith v. Zent, 83 Ind. 86.

    The appellants asked the court to instruct the jury that if they found that the amount for which the property sold had been applied upon a judgment in favor of H. J. Trentman. & Bro., against the appellees, such fact should be considered, in mitigation of damages.

    The jury found, in answer to an interrogatory, that the-money arising from the sale was not so applied, and, therefore, the refusal of the court t.o give this instruction, if erroneous, was harmless. Moore v. Lynn, 79 Ind. 299.

    The appellants also asked the court to charge the jury that if they found' that $391.90 was the fair cash value of that-portion of the property sold to one Helmer and Martin &■ Co., and that the residue of the property attached was left with the appellees, the sum for which such portion sold was. the proper measure of damages.

    This instruction was properly refused. It ignored one important element of damages, and that was the right of theappellees to recover in such action such sum as would compensate them for the expenses incurred in defending the suit, in attachment. Drake Attachment, section 175.

    The appellants also asked the court to instruct the jury that if they found that H. J. Trentman & Bro. had filed a claim under the attachment proceedings of the appellant Trentman, and that a judgment was rendered thereon for $137, without any denial of the affidavit filed therewith, said H. J. Trentman & Bro. would hold a lien upon the property attached, by virtue of the writ of attachment, and *38the appellees would not be entitled to claim said property or its value in this suit.

    This instruction was also properly refused. When a creditor'files a claim, under an attachment proceeding, he becomes a party to such proceeding, and when such proceeding is tried and determined the judgment concludes all persons who are parties. The statute does not contemplate á separate trial of such proceeding by each creditor who becomes a party by filing his claim, and if a creditor’s claim is allowed, but the proceedings in attachment are defeated, as wras done in this case, such creditor has no lien or claim upon such property by virtue of such proceeding. Lexington, etc., R. R. Co. v. Ford Plate Glass Co., 84 Ind. 516.

    • The appellants also requested the court to instruct the jury that if they should find that the appellant Trentman, since the commencement o‘f the trial, had released a portion of the goods attached to the appellees, this fact should be considered in estimating the damages sustained.

    The jury found that no goods had been released, and this fact renders the ruling upon this instruction harmless.

    The appellants also complain of an instruction given by the court, as to.the measure of damages, which will be considered hereafter.

    The fourth paragraph of the answer set up a judgment in favor of the appellant Trentman against the appellees as a set-off, and the thirteenth and fourteenth interrogatories asked the jury to state the amount of costs recovered in such action. These interrogatories the court refused to submit to the jury, and of this the appellants complain. There was no averment in the complaint, nor proof upon the trial, of the amount of costs recovered, and, therefore, there was 'no error in this ruling.

    Interrogatories numbered from 19 to 28, inclusive, were intended to elicit the facts concerning the claim of H. J. Trent-man & Bro., and its allowance by the court. These the court refused to submit to the jury, and this ruling was proper, for *39the reason heretofore given why the allowance of this claim •did not affect the rights of the parties to this action.

    The question propounded by the sixty-seventh and sixty-eighth interrogatories was as to whom the money deposited with the clerk belonged; and these the court refused to submit to the jury. This was right. The enquiry was a question of law and not of fact. •

    The motion of appellants for judgment upon the answers •of the jury to interrogatories can not be sustained. No fact was found by them that controls the general verdict and entitles the appellants to judgment.

    The court, over appellants’ objection, rendered a judgment for the costs, without relief from valuation or appraisement laws, and this was assigned as a cause for a new trial. Such order is not ground for a new trial, and, as it was not assigned its error, no question arises upon the ruling.

    The appellants also insist that the damages assessed were •excessive, and that the court misdirected the jury as to the proper measure of damages. Upon this question the court instructed the jury as follows: If you believe from the evidence that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover anything on account of expenses and attorney fees incurred by them in defending said attachment, the amount thereof, added to the damages you find for the attaching of their property, would constitute the amount you would be entitled to fix as the damages for the issuing, service and defence of said attachment suit and proceeding, to which should be added interest at six per .•cent, per annum on the full amount of damages, from the commencement of the attachment to this time.”

    This instruction means, as we suppose, that the amount of expenses incurred in the defence of the attachment suit is to be added to the damages caused by the attachment of the property, and interest at six per cent, from the time the writ of attachment was issued till the time of trial was to be added •to the sum total, as the measure of damages.

    This is not an accurate statement of the law. Where none *40of the property attached is restored to the attachment defendant, upon a failure of the attachment proceedings, but the same is wholly lost to him, the value of the property, with interest thereon from the time it was taken, and such expenses as were necessarily incurred in the defence of such proceeding, with interest thereon from the time such expenses were incurred, is the measure of damages. Compensation for the loss is the rule in such cases, and this is awarded by allowing the party the value of his property, the expenses incurred, and such sum in addition, in the nature of interest, as will compensate him for his loss. Beals v. Guernsey, 8 Johns. 446 (5 Am. Dec. 348); Kennedy v. Whitwell, 4 Pick. 466; Cooley Torts, page 457, and authorities cited.

    The party, however, in the absence of circumstances entitling him to exemplary damages, is not entitled to anything more than compensation, and, therefore, is not entitled to interest upon the value of the property attached, and expenses incurred from the time the attachment was commenced, unless the property was then seized and the expenses were then incurred. The expenses in this case were not incurred at the time the attachment was commenced; and, as the instruction in question directed the jury to assess interest as damages upon expenses before they were incurred, it was, in this respect, erroneous.

    The damages assessed were also excessive if the value of the property, and the amount of expenses incurred, as found by the jiiry in answer to interrogatories, may be relied upon in determining such question. The property was attached on the 28th day of September, 1876. Shortly thereafter the sheriff sold it as perishable property for $110.95, $71.40 of which, the net proceeds of said sale, was paid into court; and, on the 6th day of July, 1878, when the proceedings in attachment were adjudged against appellants, this sum was ordered paid to the appellees. This was not, however, done, and this sum remained in the hands of the clerk on the 29th day of October, 1880, when the judgment in this cause was rendered. Whether *41this money, in the absence of the order made to pay it to the ajjpellees, would be treated as their money, or whether they could recover full damages, as upon a complete conversion of their property, it is not necessary to determine, as we are of opinion, that, after the order was made, to which no objection was interposed, the money must be treated as belonging to the appellees, and their damages assessed accordingly. If this were not so, after judgment and satisfactionforfu.il damages, this order would entitle the appellees to this money,, which would, in the absence of such order, under such circumstances, belong to the appellants. The fourth paragraph of the answer, as before stated, was a set-off by Trentman, who was principal in the bond, and the jury found there was.due thereon $861.38. They also found that the value of the property attached was $1,250, and that the expenses incurred amounted to $170.48. If interest at six per cent, upon these last two sums, from the time the writ of attachment was issued until the judgment was rendered, is added, and from the aggregate the amount of money in the clerk’s hands and the amount of the set-off are deducted, it will be found that the verdict is at least $65 in excess of the damages sustained. In addition to this it appears that the expenses were not incurred when the attachment Avas issued, and that the excess is, therefore, greater than the sum above named. It, however does appear that all expenses were incurred before the 28th of June, 1878, when the attachment suit was tried, and if interest is alloAved upon the amount of expenses incurred from this time, and upon the value of the property from the time the attachment issued, at which time the property was taken, and from the sum total of these several amounts the amount of the appellant Trentman’s judgment and the amount of money in the hands of the clerk are deducted, it will be found that the sum assessed is $82 in excess of the damages sustained. This amount may be remitted, and the errors in giving the instruction and in making the assessment may thus be rendered harmless, without a reversal of the judgment.

    *42We have now considered all the questions in the record, and .are of opinion that if the appellees will, within sixty days, remit $82 of the.judgment, as of its date, the same should be affirmed for the residue; otherwise reversed.

    Per Curiam. — It is therefore ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that if. the appellees will, within sixty days from this time, remit $82 of the judgment, as of its date, the same will be affirmed for the residue, at the appellees’ costs in this court. Otherwise, reversed, at the appellees’ costs.

Document Info

Docket Number: No. 9221

Citation Numbers: 85 Ind. 33

Judges: Best

Filed Date: 11/15/1882

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/24/2022