Court Opinion

ID: 7928084
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:01:33.792115+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:15.860297
License: Public Domain

MáRSTON, J:
A careful examination of the record fails to disclose any error in this case. The different assignments of error may all be considered under three heads:
First, Upon cross-examination of the defendant in error, *299certain questions were asked for the purpose of eliciting answers derogatory to her character; those questions were objected to, and the objection was sustained. It is undoubtedly true that an examination into the past life and character of a witness would materially aid and assist the jury in giving proper weight to his or her testimony. The right to' ask such questions, however, in all cases, without any reference to the issue, or to the character and reputation of the witness upon the stand, might be abused, and we think a large discretion must bo left to the court below, to admit or reject such testimony. — See Beebe v. Knapp, 28 Mich., 72.
Second, The plaintiff in the court below was also asked upon cross-examination, whether she purchased the property in dispute noth her own money; whether as a matter of fact, she would have sold a portion of the property at auction sale for a certain. price; . and as to the probability of the property in dispute having been delivered by the defendants by mistake.
It was a matter of no possible concern to the defendants whether the plaintiff bought this property with her own money or not. The defendants received the property, if at all, as warehousemen. They did not claim any title to the same, nor did they claim to hold it for any third party; having received it from the plaintiff, it was their duty to return it to her; and in an action brought to recover its value they could not under such circumstances question her right to recover. Neither was it material to inquire whether she would or not have sold this property at a certain price at auction. The plaintiff was not bound to dispose of her property in such manner, and the answer to such a question ■would not establish the proper measure of damages. As to the probability of the property having been delivered by the defendants by mistake, the answer to such a question would be a matter of pure speculation or guess-work. It would be a mere matter of opinion, if admissible under any circumstances, dependent upon the care exercised by the. *300■defendants in the conduct of tbeir business, and other considerations, none of which, it appears, were known to the witness.
Third, The other assignments of error relate to the demand made, and as to whether there was sufficient eyidence ■of a conversion.
There was eyidence tending to show that defendants received this and other property from the plaintiff; that she afterwards called and receipted on defendants’ books for all the property delivered by her to them, and that they then told her they .had all her property. She then sent a dray-man after her goods, but he did not receive the box in ■question. She afterwards called at defendants’ warehouse, when they told her they had delivered all her goods. Upon plaintiff’s insisting that she had not received them, they then denied having ever received this box; they also claimed that if they ever had received the same they had delivered it to a drayman by the name of Wallace. The plaintiff testified that she had not given Wallace any authority to receive the box, and there was no evidence tending to show that she ever had authorized him to receive it. The plaintiff, while testifying as to one of the interviews she had with defendants, was asked, “Did you then demand the box?” She answered, “Yes, and I was told in answer thereto, by one of the defendants, that they had delivered all the goods that were there.” There were other facts bearing upon the questions raised, but the above is sufficient. Here, then, was evidence proper to go to the jury, tending to show a receipt of these goods by the defendants and a delivery of them to a third party having no authority from the plaintiff to receive them. This would be competent evidence upon the question of a conversion, if the jury believed it.
There was also evidence tending to show that they had the goods about the time she made the demand, and that they did not deliver them to her, but denied ever having received them. This also would be sufficient evidence of a ■conversion. It is insisted, however, that there was no evi*301dence of a demand haying been made; that the answer, “Yes, sir,” to the question “Did you then demand the box?” was not sufficient evidence of a demand to enable the plaintiff to maintain trover, but that the conversation ■ between the parties at the time the demand was made should have been given, so that the court might pass upon the question whether such facts were sufficient to satisfy the law in that regard. It is sufficient to say that the answer of the witness to the question asked, the same not having been objected to as leading or incompetent, was proper to go to the jury, and while the plaintiff might have shown all that was said and done by the parties at the time the demand was made, yet she was not, after receiving an answer to the question, bound to do so, and if the defendants did not, on cross-examination, deem it proper to pursue the inquiry, they have now no just cause of complaint.
There was therefore sufficient evidence to justify the jury in finding a conversion of the property, and the court having properly submitted the question to the jury, their finding is final.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
The other Justices concurred.