Judges: Jenks
Filed Date: 7/1/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/26/2024
The defendant is a common carrier sued for conversion. It pleaded title to the goods, and a verdict was directed in its favor. The question is whether such plea was available in defense. The
In Western Transportation Co. v. Barber (56 N. Y. 544, 552) it is said that the rule “ applies in all cases where the bailee seeks to avail himself of the title of a third person for the purpose of keeping the property himself from the bailor, and to all cases where the bailee has not yielded to a paramount title in another.” In The Idaho (supra), where the rule in Western Transportation Co. v. Barber (supra) is applied, it is said that the rule is not • to be denied “ in any case where he has not yielded to the paramount title.” In Mullins v. Chickering (110 N. Y. 513, 514) the court say that the bailees could not dispute the title “ except in one emergency ” and that they were free to do so in that case in that they liad submitted to the title and had delivered the property to those ■who claimed to be the owners. The dissent in that case, per Dan.rorth and Gray, JJ., takes the.ground that the rule applied unless "the bailment had been determined by what is equivalent to an • eviction by the real owner, and so is in favor of the rigor of the .rule. Sedgwick v. Macy (24 App. Div. 1) holds that the right ■.to plead jus tertii “'is limited either to a case where he has actually -delivered the property to the true owner, or where he has assumed such a relation towards the true owner that he is. no longer in a situation to deny that the third person actually owns the projierty and is entitled to its possession.” Parsons on Contracts (Vol. 2 [8th ed.], p. 215) says: “ In general, no agent can defend against the action of his principal, by setting up the jus tei'tii in his own -favor. On the other hand, if the carrier delivers them to a third party, and it can be shown in an action against him that this third party was the actual and lawful owner, and that the plaintiff, who delivered the goods to the carrier, had no right to them whatever, this certainly is a sufficient defence.” Schouler on Bailments and Carriers (3d ed. § 494) says: “ While a bailee cannot avail
Of course this circumstance does not appear in this case, for inasmuch as the carrier asserts title in itself there can be no yielding to a paramount title in the sense that another is the owner of the goods. But the question is, does the reason apply ? Is the bailee permitted to plead the jus tertii under such circumstances ex necessitate — by the logic of things — or is the requirement only by way of further assurance that he is not pleading the title of a third person as a cloalc to keep the goods ? I think for the former reason. Gboveb, •J., indicates this in his opinion in Western Transportation Co. v. Barter (supra): “ If the owner demands the property of the bailee and he refuses to deliver it to him, he is at once liable to him in an action for its conversion. This is a tort, and it would be somewhat anomalous, if the bailee should shield himself from this by delivering the property to the owner, that he could not show such facts as a defence to the groundless claim of the bailor for the property_ * * * When the owner comes and demands his property he is entitled to its immediate delivery, and it is the duty of the possessor to make it. The law will not adjudge the performance of this duty tortious as against a bailor having no title.” In other words, the bailee is permitted to assert the jus tertii because his ■duty compelled him to yield to the demand of the true owner of the ■goods. In Pulliam v. Burlingame (81 Mo. 111) the defendant proved joint title in his wife and in the plaintiff, and the court said : It does not appear that his wife, as paramount claimant, ever asserted any title to this property. Consequently his plea that he holds it as agent for his wife, implies that this is his voluntary act, and was not forced upon him by the assertion in any form of her pretended
Where the carrier himself asserts tliejv,s, he has not yielded to any demand nor has there been eviction by paramount title or its equivalant. No peril requires the plea. He received the goods as a carrier and thereafter asserted his title of course of his own motion.
With respect to the rule, the Supreme Court of the United States said in The Idaho (supra) that it applies to the common carrier as well as other bailees. The rule was applied against the bailee in Thompson v. Williams (30 Kans. 114), per Brewer, J.; Pulliam v. Burlingame (supra); Simpson v. Wrenn (50 Ill. 222). It is urged, naturally with much force, that the owner is entitled to his property whenever and wherever he finds it. But if there be more than one claimant the courts must decide between them. If the defendant found the goods in the plaintiff’s possession and the plaintiff asserts title, the defendant must prove his own title. But in this case it gained possession, not under claim of title, but by the act of the plaintiff (still asserting his title), for a service which in no way negatived the plaintiff’s claim or gave any color of title to the defendant save for the purpose of carriage. It thereafter asserts ownership and avails itself of this qualified possession. Possession is evidence of ownership, even though of “ the lowest species,” but presumptive and easily liable to be overcome. (Rawley v. Brown, 71 N. Y. 85.) But it is an advantage in a litigation over title which the defendant has thus gained. This fact moved the court in Simpson v. Wrenn (supra). Though the defendant be barred in this suit from this plea it does not embarrass save to require circuity of action, while even in this action evidence of its ownership is admissible on the question of damages. (Bursley v. Hamilton, 15 Pick. 40, 43. See, too, Wright v. Pratt, 31 Wis. 99.)
I think that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
Hirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
6 Cow. 378.
1 Barn. & Adol. 450. -