Court Opinion

ID: 3486359
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 21:13:07.136876+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:52:39.976328
License: Public Domain

In September, 1919, Mrs. Frank Brady, wife of the appellee, bought from Besche Brothers, the appellants, some household furniture, under a conditional contract of purchase in writing, for prices aggregating $571.15, of which the sum of fifty dollars was paid at once and the balance was payable at the rate of six dollars bi-weekly. About a month after the purchase and delivery of the furniture, Mrs. Brady and her husband had a misunderstanding which caused their separation. In view of that occurrence, Mr. Brady, who had provided the money for the original and succeeding payments on the furniture, asked the appellants, as he testified, to store it for him until he and his wife should become re-united. According to the appellants' version the request was that the furniture be taken back as a means of terminating the contract of purchase. At all events the greater part of the furniture was removed by the appellants to their store room. Mr. Brady kept in his possession several articles, the contract prices of which totaled $72.15, and Mrs. Brady retained a lamp valued at $10.50, for which she made a separate settlement. The bi-weekly payments were continued by Mr. Brady for a period of about ten months. A reconciliation having been then effected between himself and his wife, they together went to the store of the appellants and asked that a bed-room suit included in the original purchase be returned to their possession. They were informed by the appellants that the furniture had been placed in stock when it was brought back to the store, and had afterwards been sold. An offer to substitute other furniture, and a proposed settlement on a monetary *Page 584 
basis, not being acceptable, Mr. Brady brought this action in trover to recover damages for the conversion of the furniture, which he claims the appellants agreed to hold in storage subject to his order. It was asserted and disputed in the testimony that the market value of the furniture had largely increased, as compared with the purchase price, when its redelivery was requested. The appeal is from a judgment, on the verdict of a jury, in the plaintiff's favor for the sum of three hundred dollars.
There is one bill of exception in the record. It relates to the rulings on the prayers. The appellants complain particularly of the granting of a prayer offered by the plaintiff which defined the measure of damages. It instructed the jury that, if they found for the plaintiff, their verdict should be "for such a sum of money as the jury may find to be the value of the goods and chattels mentioned in the evidence at the time of the conversion with interest to date." Under ordinary conditions that would be a correct statement of the measure of damages in an action of trover. Seaboard Air Line Rwy. v. Phillips, 108 Md. 285;Swartz v. G.B.S. Brewing Co., 109 Md. 393. But the prayer disregards the important fact that the plaintiff had acquired from the defendants only a partial interest in the property alleged to have been converted. The contract of purchase, under which he appears to have acted and been treated as the real vendee, was only partly performed. A considerable amount of the purchase price was still unpaid. The conversion of the furniture by a sale to other persons could not have the effect of placing the plaintiff in the position he would occupy if he had fully paid the purchase price stipulated in the contract. In this suit against the vendors, to whom the price was to be paid, the fact that the greater portion of it was still due at the time of the alleged conversion should have been taken into consideration upon the question as to the possible extent of the plaintiff's recovery. But by the instruction before us the jury were authorized to award the plaintiff the full value of *Page 585 
the furniture without any deduction on account of the unpaid purchase money. The prayer was also incorrect in allowing recovery of "the value of the goods and chattels mentioned in the evidence" without reservation as to the furniture which the plaintiff retained in his possession and to which the evidence referred. There was consequently error in the granting of the prayer, and, in view of the amount of the verdict, and of the evidence as to the value of the furniture, we cannot hold that the error was not prejudicial. This was the only prayer which the plaintiff offered.
The defendants submitted seven prayers, all of which were refused. The first sought to withdraw the case from the jury. It was properly rejected as there was evidence legally sufficient to support the theory of the suit. The second and third prayers disputed the plaintiff's right to maintain the action because of the fact that the conditional sale was made to his wife. The evidence as to the recognition of the plaintiff as the real purchaser made these prayers unavailable. The fourth, fifth and seventh prayers were based on the theory that the defendants were entitled to retain the furniture, and hence are not amenable to this suit, because the purchase price had not been fully paid. These prayers ignore the testimony of the plaintiff that the furniture was delivered to the defendants upon their promise to store it for his future use. If there was a conversion in violation of such an agreement, the theory embodied in the three prayers last noted would not be effective to prevent a recovery, especially in view of the fact that the defendants continued to accept the regular bi-weekly payments from the plaintiff after the furniture received from him had been subjected to the disposition of which he complains. The sixth prayer defines the measure of damages consistently with the views we have stated, and we think it might properly have been granted.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and new trial awarded. *Page 586