Court Opinion

ID: 6583108
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:40:04.647498+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:21.672763
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Ross, J.
I. The amount of the debt secured by the chattel mortgage legally due from the plaintiff to the defendant was necessarily involved in determining whether the plaintiff had fully paid it before demanding that the defendant should discharge the mortgage. If, as claimed by the plaintiff, usury was included in the note secured by the mortgage, he was entitled to show the amount of such usury to enable the jury to determine whether he had fully paid all that was legally due from him to the defendant thereon before he called upon the defendant to discharge the mortgage. Hence, it was not error to admit evidence tending to show that usury was included in thé mortgage note. The fact that it became, afterwards in the course of the trial, immaterial to the issue whether usury was or was not included in the mortgage note, did not render the admission of evidence legitimate at the time it was admitted erroneous. This exception is not sustained.
H. The defendant excepted to the admission of any evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had suffered any damages beyond the penalty prescribed by the statute, claiming that the declaration should contain separate counts, one declaring for *602the penalty and another for damages. We do not think that this exception is Avell taken. The action is upon sec. 2 of No. 69 of the Acts of 1882. That section of the act makes it the duty of the mortgagee, after the performance of. the condition of a mortgage of personal property, within ten days after being thereto requested by any person entitled to redeem, to discharge the mortgage, and prescribes that for a failure to discharge the mortgage within the time limited, the person entitled to redeem may recover of the person whose duty it is to discharge the mortgage, ten dollars and all damages occasioned thereby, in an action on the case. In declaring upon this provision of the statute, the necessity for separate counts for the ten dollars, the fixed damages, and for all damages occasioned thereby, is not apparent. The fixed damages, or penalty, and all damages occasioned thereby, arise from the same state of facts. It cannot be necessary to repeat th.e same facts in two counts, closing one with a demand to recover the ten dollars, and the other with a demand to recover all damages, when the right to recover both is given by the same section of the statute and upon exactly the same facts. But if two counts were strictly necessary, one for the fixed and another for the actual damages, including both in one count could not be taken advantage of by exception to the admission of the evidence. At most it would be open to the fault of duplicity in pleading, which must be taken advantage of by demurrer.
III. The declaration counts upon the recovery of “ ten dollars and other damages occasioned ” by the defendant’s alleged refusal or neglect to discharge the mortgage. Under the allegation of “other damages,” the plaintiff could recover only such damages as were the natural consequences of the refusal. The plaintiff’s time and expenses in going to St. Johnsbury to see Mr. Sulloway did not flow as a natural consequence from the defendant’s neglect to discharge the mortgage, but rather from the false declaration that Mr. Sulloway had the mortgage. By the tenns of the statute (Sec. 2, Act 1882), it was the *603defendant’s duty to discharge the mortgage, not upon the mortgage but upon the record thereof, at the town clerk’s office. Hence, the town clerk’s office was the place wher.e the plaintiff should have gone to determine whether the mortgage had been discharged. His journey to St. Johnsbury induced by the defendant’s falsehood, was special damage, if any, and could only be recovered, if at all, upon a special allegation therefor. It was error to receive this evidence against the defendant’s exception upon the general allegation of “ other damages,” which could only mean the damages naturally arising from the defendant’s neglect to discharge the mortgage.
IV. But it is claimed that this evidence was admissible upon the question of exemplary damages. If such damages were recoverable in this form of action, it would be admissible upon that branch of the case. But the court did not confine it to that branch of the case, but told the jury that the plaintiff might recover the damages he sustained in going to St. Johns-bury, which, as we have held, was error.
At the trial the defendant contended that exemplary damages could not be recovered in this action and excepted to the holding of the court to the contrary. We think this holding was error. Whether the plaintiff might not have maintained a common law action for the neglect or refusal of the defendant to discharge the mortgage upon proper request after the mortgage was satisfied, and in such action have recovered upon proof of willful neglect, exemplary damages need not be determined. This is not such an action, but an action upon the statute, by which, for the refusal or neglect to discharge the mortgage upon the record, for a limited time, after a proper request, the plaintiff was entitled to recover a fixed sum, ten dollars, and ‘ ‘ all damages occasioned ” by the neglect or refusal. The fixed sum of ten dollars was evidently intended as the limit of the damages recoverable for the neglect or refusal above “ all damages occasioned thereby.” Exemplary damages are based upon the willful misconduct of the defendant in the transaction, are not recoverable as a matter of right, are largely in the *604sound discretion of the jury, and cannot be said to be damages occasioned by the neglect or refusal of the defendant. Having based his action upon the statute, the plaintiff must be confined in recovery of damages to the limits given by the statute. Hence, in this form of action, based as it is upon the statute, it was error for the. court to tell the jury that the plaintiff could recover exemplary damages, if he showed he was entitled to any actual- damages. Eor these errors the judgment of the County Court must be reversed. But as these errors do not touch the plaintiff’s right to recover the ten dollars named in the statute, the plaintiff would on the record still be entitled to judgment for that sum, if he should remit all above that sum.
The judgment of the County Court is reversed; and if the plaintiff shall remit all damages above ten dollars within ten days from the filing of this entry then judgment is rendered for the plaintiff to recover ten dollars and his costs less the defendant’s costs in this court. On the plaintiff’s failure to remit the damages above ten dollars within the time named, the case is remanded for a new trial.
POWERS, J., did not sit in the case.