DocketNumber: No. 31866.
Citation Numbers: 163 So. 684, 174 Miss. 176, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 40
Judges: Anderson, Ethridge
Filed Date: 10/28/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The proceeding in the court below was replevin for the recovery of the possession of a truck held up, or detained, by an officer of this state because of the payment of insufficient privilege license. The issue pleaded in the replevin, and the only one permissible, is the general issue. The question for determination by this court was whether the plaintiff, appellee here, was entitled to immediate possession of the truck held up.
It appears, as stated in the original opinion, that the appellee, Haney, had not paid a sufficient privilege tax for the amount being carried by his truck over the highways. There seems to be no dispute about this proposition. The officer observed the truck and noted that it seemed to be heavily loaded, and that the license tag was for one and one-half tons, and he requested Haney to show him his bills of lading or invoices showing the amount he was carrying, and these showed slightly under three tons. Thereupon, this officer took charge of the truck and removed the license tag. The appellee made efforts to secure the money to pay the additional amount of tax due, and was necessarily hindering in his journey until the amount could be raised, or until bond could be given, or other proceedings taken to secure possession of the truck.
Under the statutes (Laws 1934, chap. 126, secs. 19, 20) cited in the original opinion, the state had a lien upon the truck for the payment of the required privilege license, and as it had not been fully paid when suit was instituted, the plaintiff in replevin, appellee here, had no right to possession of the truck, and having no right to *Page 185 the possession of the truck, and the state having impounded it to secure the privilege tax, there was no damage, in a legal sense, to the plaintiff by such detention. Whatever damage he sustained was what is known as damages without injury.
It is urged, however, that there was no proof as to whether the plaintiff had paid the extra privilege tax in addition to the regular privilege tax to justify his carrying such a load, and that the burden was upon the state to show this, and that the state failed to meet it. We are unable to agree with this statement. We think it is a matter within the peculiar knowledge of the owner of the truck as to whether he had paid such extra license money. In 22 C.J., p. 81, sec. 24, under the heading "Effect of Peculiar Knowledge or Control of Evidence," it is stated that: "In the administration of justice it is often wise to place the burden of producing evidence on the party best able to sustain it, and ambiguity, concealment, or evasion react with peculiar force on a pleader who asserts a fact and fails to produce the evidence, which if his assertion were true, would be in his possession. Hence it is very generally held that where the party who has not the general burden of proof possesses positive and complete knowledge concerning the existence of facts which the party having that burden is called upon to negative, or where, for any reason, the evidence to prove a fact is chiefly, if not entirely, within his control, the burden rests on him to produce the evidence, although he is obliged to go no further than necessity requires." In case note 40 it is said: "There certainly can be no semblance of justice in relieving the party from making a disclosure who is in a position to make it, or in making an explanation which will excuse it, if there be such an explanation available to him," citing Jolliffe v. Northern Pac. R. Co.,
In addition to what these authorities have said the appellee in the case at bar had the burden of proving all the facts necessary to show his right to immediate possession of the truck when the suit was instituted.
The suggestion of error also quotes the following statement from the original opinion: "Under the plain provisions of the statute, Greer had a right to seize and impound the truck pending the necessary legal proceedings to enforce the payment of the additional license tax. It is true he had no right to hold the truck indefinitely without taking steps for that purpose." It is said that this is an accurate statement of the law according to the conception and theory of the appellee, and it is on this theory that the appellee tried this case; but that this statement of the law is exactly contrary to the conception and theory of the appellant, and directly in conflict with the theory on which the appellant tried the case.
We do not so understand the theory of appellant to be as contended by the appellant. It must be remembered that this suit is a suit for possession of the truck, and not a suit by the state to condemn the truck, nor is it a right of action for damages independent of the right of possession of the truck. In other words, the statement in the above-quoted part of the original opinion that Greer had no right to withhold the truck indefinitely without taking steps for that purpose is more a statement of the duty of the officer under such circumstances to act with reasonable dispatch. In the case at bar, the appellee was *Page 187 trying to make arrangements by which he could get a release of the truck, and was being indulged in that effort by the officer, and instead of appellee being damaged, it was beneficial to him. It was certainly the duty of the party operating the truck to secure the necessary privilege license, and it would have been natural had he paid this privilege tax when interrogated by the officer about the capacity of the load, and when the officer examined his bills of lading, to have produced his license or state the facts with reference to it.
The court has dealt with the case as presented by the record, and has decided it according to its conception of the law, and when the pleadings are considered, we see no other result that we could reach in the case than we have already reached.
The suggestion of error will, therefore, be overruled.
Suggestion of error overruled.