Court Opinion

ID: 8187714
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:10:27.09795+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:29.091453
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed July 3, 1903:
Dodge, J.
The view reached by this court upon one of the questions presented is so conclusive upon the whole case as to render unnecessary discussion and decision of others, quite numerous, and involving much of difficulty, if not doubt. In Joseph Dessert L. Co. v. Wadleigh, 103 Wis. 318, 79 N. W. 237, it was said at the pen of our late Brother Bae-dbew : “When a complaint is presented for judicial inspection, it is the court’s first duty to ascertain the nature of the cause of action alleged.” The reasons for reaching certainty on such question as preliminary to further consideration of the cause were so admirably expressed in that case that nothing can well be added. Upon plaintiff’s theory of the facts existing when the complaint was framed, it can hardly be doubted that he had two or more causes of action. Eirst, he was wronged by the original severance and taking of the logs; next, when they came to the Eagle Lumber Company by purchase and it so acted with reference to them as to work an invasion of plaintiff’s ownership, and again when the lumber was taken possession of by the appellants and by them shipped away, — if, indeed, there be anything in the facts to convict them of conversion at all. Each of these constituted a distinct wrong against plaintiff, but in which some at least of the defendants did not kt all participate, except as by virtue of sec. 4269, Stats. 1898, all subsequent dealers are deemed to be participants in the original severance and taking of the property. Smith v. Briggs, 64 Wis. 497, 25 N. W. 558. The complaint malees no attempt to state several separate causes of action. It must therefore be construed as stating some particular one of those which might arise out of the facts which it summarizes. The intention of the pleader as to which one must be' ascertained from the document itself in the light of the facts as more amplified by the evidence. When that cause of action is discovered, all others are excluded; for he cannot be permitted to attack with a weapon arranged to “hit if a deer and miss if a calf,” as stated in *130Joseph Dessert L. Co. v. Wadleigh, supra. It is not enough that he may have stated facts out of which may be spelled one cause of action, if there is also stated another, which is obviously the primary and dominant one. Klipstein v. Raschein, 117 Wis. 248, 94 N. W. 63.
It therefore becomes necessary to decide for which of the wrongs committed against the plaintiff this action is brought — whether for the original severance and taking of the timber by the Smiths, or for the alleged sale and shipment of the lumber by Flanner and Brown. It must at once be conceded that this complaint is more complex and less direct than that considered in Joseph Dessert L. Co. v. Wadleigh, supra, but, on the other hand, it presents some indicia of the pleader’s purpose which were not there found. In that case the single defendant was the person who both cut the trees and disposed of the product. He might have been sued for cither act, and there was no joinder of others whose presence was proper to one cause of action, but improper to another, as in the case at bar. Both cases are alike, however, in that in both the wrongful severance and the conversion are alleged — a circumstance which is very significant, for the wrongful cutting of the timber is in no wise essential to the •statement of a cause of action for the conversion charged upon the appellants. Title in plaintiff to the lumber sufficed to support that actioii, without regard to whether the original cutting was in defiance or recognition of his ownership of the land. We do not mean to declare that the allegation that the original cutting and removal of the logs was wrongful and in wilful and deliberate denial of the rights of plaintiff’s assignor, would render demurrable a complaint clearly seeking recovery for some subsequent conversion of the lumber, but that it is so unessential to such cause of action, and so essential to a different one, that its presence is highly significant of the pleader’s purpose. On the other hand, all the allegations .of transactions subsequent to the original taking were *131germane and material to an action therefor, such as is- authorized by sec. 4269, Stats. 1898, against the original takers and the subsequent handlers. Another element of the complaint is joihder of defendants wholly inconsistent with an action to recover for a conversion of the lumber by the acts ■of the appellants in selling and shipping it after it had passed through the intermediate possession of the Eagle Lumber Company, and manufacture by them, and after all association of the Smiths therewith had terminated. Such specific act •of conversion, if such it was, was committed solely by appellants, and the Smiths were not permissible parties to an action therefor. 2 Addison, Torts, § 543; Dahms v. Sears, 13 Oreg. 47, 65, 11 Pac. 891; Cooper v. Blair, 14 Oreg. 255, 12 Pac. 370; Ray v. Light, 34 Ark. 421, 431. Such joinder is said to be a very significant fact, sufficient to turn the scale in a doubtful case. Francisco v. Hatch, 117 Wis. 242, 247, 93 N. W. 1118, 1120. As already pointed out, the joinder of •appellants is entirely proper to an action under the statute to recover damages for the original cutting and removal of the timber. Smith v. Briggs, supra. Again, it is alleged that plaintiff’s damages resulted, not from the final act of selling and shipping the lumber with which alone the appellants had any connection, but from the “several acts_ of conversion,” commencing with the cutting of the timber. Reco/ery could be had in one action for such several distinct acts of conversion as the evidence discloses, only by virtue of the statute connecting them with the original act.
We do not overlook the fact that the complaint, with some industry, alleges that plaintiff was owner of the lumber at Rhinelander in 1893 and spring of 1894, of which no proof was made. That allegation is doubtless consistent with an attempt to state a cause of action for a conversion of the lumber at or after that time, and is to be given due weight. It serves, however, only to bring the situation within both Joseph Dessert L. Co. v. Wadleigh, 103 Wis. 318, 79 N. W. *132237, and Klipstein v. Raschein, 117 Wis. 248, 94 N. W. 63, where the complaints stated all the facts necessary to constitute the repudiated cause of action, hut ‘nevertheless were held not to state it, hut a different one. We do not think the •presence of this allegation sufficient to overcome the effect of all the other indicia of the pleader’s main and primary purpose.
For the reasons above stated, we cannot avoid the conclusion that the action when first brought, as defined by the complaint, was one for the cutting and taking away of timber belonging to plaintiff by the two Smiths, to which the joinder of appellants, who did not participate therein, was authorized by sec. 4269, Stats. 1898, making them liable for the damages thence resulting.
This being, then, an action to recover damages resulting, from the wrong committed against plaintiff by the wrongful cutting and removal of his timber, which confessedly occurred more than six years before the action was commenced, we can entertain no doubt that the bar of the statute of limitations was complete. That limitation began the moment the cause of action accrued. The cause of action had completely accrued before the delivery of the logs to the Eagle Lumber Company and before they were manufactured into lumber. On any day for more than six years prior to September, 1898, plaintiff might have commenced his action. There is no escape from the obvious conclusion in the fact that some of the p allies, who, by virtue of the statute, might become liable to a judgment in that action, were not ascertained until later. That statute carries a right of recovery of damages along and imposes it upon any who may become purchasers with notice at any time before trial, but it is the same cause of action, accrued at the time of the original taking, and becomes barred at the end of six years. If we concede, as plaintiff contends, that he has an election whether he will sue upon one wrong or another in a series of conversions, *133lie must, but for tbe statute, sue separately' for each, with certainty of expense and possibility of failure to collect in some. Only when be elects to sue for tbe first wrong can be avoid tbat peril and join tbe subsequent conversioners. If be elects to avail bimself of tbat statutory privilege, be must accept tbe statutory burden of diligence with it. ■
We therefore conclude tbat tbe present action was, at tbe time of its commencement, barred by tbe statute of limitations, duly pleaded. The dismissal as to certain of the defendants upon tbe trial could not change the nature of tbe action, and transpose tbe suit into one to recover for another and separate wrong. Judgment for all tbe defendants should have been rendered upon tbe facta found.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for tbe defendants.
Upon a motion for a rehearing there was a brief by Greene, Fairchild, NoHh & Parlcer, attorneys for tbe respondent, and a brief by Hooper & Hooper, for tbe appellants.
Tbe motion was denied September 29, 1903.