Judges: Hardest
Filed Date: 9/15/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Barker v. Mathews, 1 Denio, 335, is an authority to the effect that the plaintiff, a judgment creditor, “cannot sustain an action against a wrongdoer [the defendant here] for taking property out of the possession of the officer.” That case
“But we think it very clear that a general term cannot, in a doubtful case, upon conflicting evidence, like the one under review, assume the place of the referee, and determine from the mere reading of the evidence who has told the truth, or is best entitled to credit. This would be imposing upon us a duty unsafe to exercise, and dangerous in its ordinary use. It.would make of a referee to try an issue simply a referee to report the testimony to this court, which, in such cases, would review nothing but the evidence, giving such a decision as, in its judgment upon the evidence, is just.”
2. The referee, in awarding damages to the plaintiff, allowed the value of the lumber which he finds was converted by the defendant’s firm according to the value of the plaintiff’s interest therein at the mill in Bedfield, where the same was sawed, instead of at the value thereof enhanced by the expense of drawing to Williams-town, 9 miles’ distance from the mill; thus awarding to the plaintiff the value of the 35 birch and maple logs containing the 5,000 feet, and the referee states the value thereof to be $30, and for that sum, with the interest thereon, he awards the plaintiff damages, and a judgment therefor; and he finds that the defendant’s firm “converted the same to their own use;” and he also finds that “on Hay 22d, 1888, the said firm of S. Sage & Son had knowledge * * * of the sale, and Chauncey S. Sage, one of the members thereof, forbid the sale on that day.” The referee did not find that the conversion by the defendant’s firm was willful, and an intended defiance of plaintiff’s known title to the property. In section 503 of Sedgwick on Damages, (8th Ed., vol. 2, p. 88,) in speaking of the rule of damages, he states that the prevailing view is that, if the defendant acted in good faith, “the measure of damages is the value of the property as it was just before the defendant’s wrongdoing began.” The author then proceeds to refer to Forsyth v. Wells, 41 Pa. St. 291, 294, and in the course of the opinion in that case it is said:
“Where the defendant’s conduct, measured by the standard of ordinary morality and care, which is the standard of the law, is not chargeable with fraud, violence, or willful negligence or wrong, the value of the property taken and converted is the measure of just compensation. If raw material has, after appropriation, and without such wrong, been changed by manufacture into a new species of property,—as grain into whisky, 'grapes into-wine, furs into hats, hides into leather, or trees into lumber,—the law either refuses the action of trover for the new article, or limits the recovery to the value of the original article. Where there is no wrongful purpose or wrongful negligence in the defendant, compensation for the Teal injury done is the purpose of all remedies.”
After the quotation which we have given the author adds: “This case is generally followed.” A discussion of the rule is found in Hyde v. Cookson, 21 Barb. 92. In that case it was said:
“Where a manufacturer has expended his money and labor, in good faith, upon property, in pursuance of a contract with the owner, he cannot be regarded as a wrongdoer, or deprived of the enhanced value which he has given to the property, in an action by the owner sounding in damages.”
We think the plaintiff was not prejudiced by allowing a witness to testify that it was worth $4 per thousand to draw the lumber from Bedfiéld to Williamstown; nor by evidence that it was worth $3 per thousand “to saw such lumber in 1888.” The foregoing views .lead us to an affirmance.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.