Case Name: Trout versus Kennedy
Court: Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Jurisdiction: Pennsylvania
Decision Date: 1864-05-04
Citations: 47 Pa. 387
Docket Number: 
Parties: Trout versus Kennedy.
Judges: Agnew, J., was at Nisi Prius when this cause was argued.
Reporter: Pennsylvania State Reports
Volume: 47
Pages: 387–393

Head Matter:
Trout versus Kennedy.
Trespass against agent of the owner of personal property for taking and carrying it away after sale of owner’s interest. — Appropriation of property by one joint owner will not sustain trespass by injured party.— Party, whose right to personal property depends on a division of it, is not- an owner until division be made.— Continuous trespasses included in our suit.
1. An owner of a saw-mill and tiipberdand leased to another the use of the mill for cutting a limited number of feet of lumber, the lessee to cut and get in the logs, saw and pile the boards, and give the owner one-half, to be divided in the pile: after sawing and piling nearly the stipulated number, he refused to divide; the landowner’s interest was seized and sold by the sheriff on an execution against him. In an action of trespass by the purchaser against the lessee for taking and carrying away all the lumber, it was Held, That as the defendant was but an agent of the owner, having no title to any part of the lumber until division, he had no right to take it, and was liable in trespass to the plaintiff therefor, though as tenant in common or joint owner of the lumber with the plaintiff, the defendant would not be liable for any act done which did not amount to its destruction.
2. Where on refusal to divide, and seizure in execution of the undivided interest of the owner in the whole of the lumber, supposed to be one-half the sheriff returned a sale of so many feet of lumber, viz., .one-half the number,' the interest in which had been levied, the purchaser took title to the whole of the interest of the owner, and not to the half of the number of feet returned as sold: and the instruction of the court to that effect was not error.
. 3. Though the lumber taken was not all hauled away at the time of suit brought, yet under the circumstances, as the taking was under claim of right, the hauling away should be considered as one continued trespass, and damages therefor allowed in a single suit.
4. It was not error to instruct the jury that one could not trespass upon another’s rights, and allege in defence that there was no market for the property taken, or that it was on that account of less value; where the jury were also instructed, that the measure of damages was the full and fair value of the property; that if at the time of the trespass, the market was depressed, too much importance should not be given by them to that fact, and that to the trespasser must bo meted out an assessment in damages commensurate to the injury he had done.
Error to the Common Pleas of Warren county.
This was an action of trespass de bonis asportatis, brought January 23d 1861, by Austin J. Kennedy against H. A. Trout, for taking and carrying away one hundred and three thousand five hundred feet of lumber, in which there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff.
On the 16th day of April I860, Dr. Henry Brooks made a contract in writing with defendant, by which the latter agreed to stock and run a steam saw-mill on Brooks’s land, manufacture therein boards, lath, and shingles, and give Brooks one-half the hoards, divided in the pile, one-third of the lath and one-half of the shingles. Each party had the privilege of giving the other notice W’hen he wanted to divide the lumber, and the other was bound to attend. Between the date of the agreement and October 1860, defendant had about two hundred and seven thousand of boards remaining at the mill, besides a small quantity which had previously been taken by Brooks, and some by himself, with which he built a mill-house near the mill. Defendant notified Brooks at two different times to come and divide the lumber, but he did not come. After that Brooks sent-A. J. Kennedy, the plaintiff, to divide it, when Trout told Kennedy that he would not divide, but would retain the whole, as Brooks had not performed his part of the contract in putting the mill in order, and that he claimed damages from Brooks and wanted to hold the lumber as his security. The lumber was measured about that time, but never was divided.
In December 1863 a fi. fa. issued to the sheriff of Warren county on a judgment in that court in favour of Steward against Dr. Henry Brooks, and on the 25th December a levy was made on Brooks’s interest in two hundred and seven thousand feet of boards then manufactured by Trout, and on 3d January 1861 the sheriff sold one hundred and three thousand five hundred feet to A. J. Kennedy for $3,50 per thousand.
After the sale to Kennedy there was no notice for a division, nor any offer -to divide by either party. Soon after the sale Trout commenced hauling the lumber to a point on the railroad, some six miles off, but in the same county, and had hauled onelialf, or perhaps a little more, from the mill lot, where it was, at the time of sheriff’s sale, and up to the day on which this suit was commenced. A portion of what he had hauled was lying at a dugway some three miles from the mill at the time of the sale. That and the residue was afterwards hauled to the railroad by Trout. He made no disposition of it whatever, and did nothing to oust Kennedy from the possession, or interfere with his ownership. After the sheriff’s sale, and before the commencement of this suit, he had moved only a portion of it, about one-half, and the residue remained on the lot where it was at the time of the sheriff’s sale.
Under these facts the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury,—
1. That the lumber not having been divided, the sheriff’s sale of Brooks’s interest in one hundred and three thousand vested in plaintiff a title to only the undivided one-half of the one hundred and three thousand, and no title whatever in the residue of the boards.
2. That the plaintiff and defendant, being tenants in common of the lumber in controversy, the possession of one is the possession of both, and no action of trover or trespass can be maintained without showing that the defendant had destroyed or made sale of the lumber to an innocent purchaser previous to the commencement of this suit.
3. That if plaintiff recover at all, he can recover damages only for that portion which defendant had removed between the 3d day of January 1861 and the 23d day of the same month.
The court below (Derrickson, P. J.) refused to affirm either of these points, and also instructed the jury that “it was not allowable for one to trespass upon the rights of another, and in his defence allege that there was no market for the property taken or destroyed, or that it was of less value on this account than it had been before, or was subsequentlywhich were the errors assigned here by the defendant, after a verdict and judgment for plaintiff.
B. Brown, for plaintiff in error.
B. W. Lacy, for defendant.
May 4th 1864,

Opinion:
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
Strong, J.
This was an action of trespass for taking and carrying away one hundred and three thousand five hundred feet of lumber, which the plaintiff alleged to belong to him, whereof he had acquired the title at a sheriff's sale of the property of Dr. Henry Brooks. The undisputed evidence in the case was, that Dr. Brooks having been the owner of a steam saw-mill, and also of the timber standing on three certain tracts of land, agreed to give the use of the mill to Trout, the defendant, for the purpose of manufacturing the timber into lumber. The agreement stipulated that Trout should cut the logs, get them to the mill, saw them out, pile the boards, and give to Dr. Brooks one-half the boards, to be divided in the pile. Under this contract two hundred and seven thousand feet were manufactured and piled, but the defendant refused to make any division, and claimed to retain all. Not only so, he removed from the mill property a considerable portion of the lumber, transporting it about three miles in the direction of the market. After this had been done, an execution was issued against Dr. Brooks, under which the sheriff levied upon his interest in the two hundred and seven thousand feet of lumber, and on the 3d of January 1861, made a sale, returning that he had sold one hundred and three thousand five hundred feet to the plaintiff for the sum of $362.25, at $3.50 per thousand. After the sale, the defendant continued to haul the lumber away until most of the remainder had been removed, when this suit was brought.
In view of these uncontroverted facts, the defendant contended at the trial that, the lumber not having been divided, the sheriff's sale gave to the plaintiff only the one-half of one hundred and three thousand five hundred feet thereof, and that the plaintiff and defendant being tenants in common of the lumber, this action of trespass could not be maintained without its being shown that the defendant had destroyed the joint property, or sold it before the commencement of the suit to an innocent purchaser. He also contended that if there could be a recovery at all, it could only be for so much of the lumber as was taken away between the sheriff's sale and the commencement of the suit.
The first of these positions is clearly not maintainable. The sheriff's levy was upon the interest of Brooks in the entire quantity of two hundred and seven thousand feet. No doubt it was supposed (as seemed to have been understood at the trial by both the court and the defendant), that the interest of Dr. Brooks was an ownership of the undivided half. Hence, when the sale came to be made, the sheriff returned it as a sale of one hundred and three thousand five hundred feet, not as a sale of the debtor's interest in that quantity, but as a sale of the quantity itself. The statement of the price also proves that quantity to have been sold. The sale was returned as made for three dollars and a half per thousand, and the aggregate proceeds as $362.25, which could not have been had any less quantity than one hundred and three thousand five hundred feet passed to the purchaser. The first point of the defendant was therefore rightly denied. And the court was not called upon to say what was the effect of the sale, if, instead of a joint ownership, the entire ownership of the lumber was in Brooks, subject only to a lien for the price of its manufacture.
The next question relates to the form of the action. And if, as was assumed in the court below, the plaintiff and defendant were tenants in common, or joint owners of the lumber, Avhen the alleged trespass was committed, it is difficult to see how an action of trespass could be maintained by one against the other for any act done to it which did not amount to its destruction. Both trespass and trover are founded upon the plaintiff's right of possession, and, of course, a right of -possession as against the defendant. But when the defendant is a tenant in common with the plaintiff, or a joint owner with him of a chattel, his right of possession is equal to that of his co-tenant. Each has an interest in the whole, and each has a right of possession. For this reason it has always been held that neither trover nor trespass can be maintained by one against the other for any injury to the chattel, or to the plaintiff's rights to it, which falls short of its destruction. See Littleton, § 323, and Lord Coke's Commentary upon it. See also 1 Chitty's Plead. 157. There are repeated decisions to this effect in both the English and American courts, and I am not aware that the doctrine has ever been questioned. It has indeed been sometimes debated whether the sale of a chattel as' entirely his own, by one joint owner, may be regarded as equivalent to its destruction, so as to enable the other OAvner to main tain trover against the vendor, and there have been dieta at least to the effect that it may.. I am unable to see that they are supported by any substantial reason. Except in the case of partnership, such a sale passes to the purchasers nothing more than the undivided interest of the vendor. We have no market overt, and one joint owner cannot sell the entirety. His vendee must take the seller's interest, and hold the chattel as the seller did. The co-tenant who does not join in the sale loses nothing by it, and hence such a sale cannot in any just sense be called a destruction. Nor do I know that it has ever been decided to be such. There is, however, an intimation in Barton v. Williams, 5 Barn. & Ald. 395, that a sale of personal property by one joint owner enables the other to maintain trover, but the case cannot be said to have been decided on that ground. So, too, in Wilson v. Gibbs, 3 Johns. 175, it was said by Spencer, J., that for the sale of a chattel an action of trover will lie by one tenant in common against another. The property in which there was a joint ownership in that ease was a hogshead of rum, which the defendant had sold, presumptively at retail, and he was held liable to his co-tenant in trover. It was not so much the sale as the selling the rum at retail, his division and distribution of it in small quantities, and therefore irrecoverable, that worked the destruction. But whatever may be said of the effect of a sale by one of several joint owners of a chattel, denial of the right of a co-tenant, and exclusive use by one, leaving the chattel still in existence, have never been held sufficient to enable the excluded owner to maintain either trover or trespass. It is true that ejectment, and in some cases trespass, will lie in favour of one tenant in common of land against his co-tenant, who has actually ousted him from the possession. There is a reason for a different rule for joint ownership of lands, from that which exists for joint ownership of chattels personal. Land is capable of actual possession by more than one at the same time, chattels are not. If then the assumption of the defendant's second point be conceded, namely, that the plaintiff and defendant were tenants in common of the lumber, the point should have been affirmed. It'was not equivalent to' destruction of the property' that the defendant had refused to make a division of it, that he had claimed it all as his own,1 and that he had actually removed it from the mill property towards a market, with a manifest purpose to carry out his declaration that it was all his, and to exclude his co-tenant. This was a gross wrong, and remediable, but not by an action of trespass. It was appropriation, not destruction.
On the other hand, if the plaintiff and defendant were not joint owners of the lumber, the defendant's second point should not have been affirmed. And that they were not, that the de fendant had no interest in it as owner until after a division, is manifest from all the evidence. That the timber, when standing, was the sole property of Dr. Brooks, under whom the plaintiff claims, is a conceded fact, as well as that the defendant never acquired title to it unless it was by virtue of the agreement for its manufacture into lumber. Nothing in that, however, vested in him any interest so long as the lumber remained undivided. It simply constituted him the agent of the owner to cut the logs, haul them to the mill, saw them into boards, and place the boards in piles. The woodland was not leased to him, woodleave was not sold, and he did not even acquire any term in the mill. He was permitted, required to use the mill, not to saw his own timber or that of the public, but to saw the logs of Dr. Brooks. True, when the lumber had been made, he was required to give his principal one-half, after it had been divided. That was a provision for the payment of his own services. It was equivalent to an allowance by the principal to the agent of one-half the product of his labour. The agreement will bear no other construction. It cannot be said that the ownership of the property was transferred to Trout when the logs were cut, or when they were hauled to the mill, or when they had been sawed, nor even when the lumber was piled, never until a division was made. And that the defendant never allowed. The time never came, therefore, when he became half owner. In this aspect of the case the defendant's proposition was not correct. Claiming the lumber as all his own, refusing to make any division, and removing it to a distant place under an assertion of exclusive right, constituted a trespass for which such an action would lie, and as he virtually disclaimed holding possession by virtue of any law, asserting absolute ownership in himself, there was nothing in the way of the plaintiff's recovery in this form of action.
Under the facts of the case, as they appeared in evidence, the court answered the defendant's third point correctly. A very large portion of the lumber was hauled away after the sale, and before the suit was brought, and that which had been hauled away before was left where it might make up full loads with that which was taken after the plaintiff became the purchaser. Whatever was taken was taken under an assertion of right to the whole. The hauling away was therefore not a succession of disconnected trespasses, but one continuous act. Every act of taking may well be considered a taking of the whole, for it was in the name of the whole. No doubt in trespass, as in other actions, damages can he assigned only to the time of purchasing the writ. New and independent trespasses may be compensated by a second action. But in this case the taking and carrying away the lumber was a single act, though it may have required many days as well as teams to remove it.
Nor was it erroneous to instruct the jury that " it is not allowable for one to trespass upon the 'rights of another, and in his defence therefor allege that there was no market for the property taken or destroyed, or that it was of less value on this account than it had been before, or was subsequently." This language must be taken with its context. So far as any rule for the measurement of damages was stated, it was that the plaintiff was entitled to the just and full value of the property. If at the time of the trespass the market was depressed, the jury were told too much importance was not to be given to that fact. The owner might have intended to keep the property for a better market, or have designed it for his own use. And a trespasser is to have meted out to him in damages an assessment commensurate with the injury he has done. If at any particular time there be no market demand for an article, it is not of course, on that account, of no value. What, a thing will bring in the market at a given time is perhaps the measure of its value then, but it is not the only one.
The judgment is affirmed.
Agnew, J., was at Nisi Prius when this cause was argued.