Court Opinion

ID: 7367932
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:53:30.622635+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:49.323940
License: Public Domain

McCLELLAN, J.
The plaintiff, the appellee, was accorded the judgment from which the defendants, appellants, appeal on an asserted • right of action for a trespass committed in the taking of personal property then in use by the plaintiff in his business of a restaurateur. The property alleged to^ have been taken consisted of an ice box, a-table, and 11 chairs.
Complaint is made of the action of the court in declining to strike from several of the counts claims for special damages of these characters, viz., damage to the plaintiff’s business, and mental pain and anguish.
(1) A trespass committed in the taking of personal property used by the owner in a lawful business enterprise may entitle him to recover special damage, proximately resulting from the wrong, in the suspension of such business for a definite period beyond a mere temporary disturbance. — Sparks v. McCreary, 156 Ala. 382, 47 South. 332, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1224; Smith *386v. Dinkelspeil, 81 Ala. 528, 8 South. 490. On this complaint it cannot be affirmed as a matter of law that the indicated possible element of damage to the plaintiff’s business was not recoverable in this action.
(2) Where the trespass to property is aggravated, or evinces an intentional violation of, or disregard for, the plaintiff’s rights, mental distress proximately consequent upon the thus committed trespass may be an element of damage for which the plaintiff is entitled to compensation. — 1 Suth. on Damages, § 95, p. 278; White v. Dresser, 135 Mass. 150, 46 Am. Rep. 454; Mattingly v. Houston, 167 Ala. 167, 52 South. 78; 38 Cyc. 1137.
On the complaint under view, it cannot be affirmed as a matter of law that the special circumstances averred do not make a case, under the doctrine just stated, wherein mental distress or disturbance may become an element of recoverable damages. Hence the motion to strike that feature of the claim for special damages was overruled without error.
(3) The question of prime importance was whether the plaintiff had paid the defendants in full for the property. The title was retained by them until the purchase price was paid; and the contract affirmed their right to retake the property upon default made. The difference between them was the matter of .a $5 claimed balance on a $30 contract. In pleas 3, 4, and 5 the defendants sought to avail of their right, as upon an asserted default in payment by plaintiff, to peaceably retake the property within the familiar doctrine of Street v. Sinclair, 71 Ala. 110; Fuller v. State, 115 Ala. 61, 22 South. 491; Terry v. Williams, 148 Ala. 469, 41 South. 804. Even if it should be conceded that these pleas were all-sufficient in asserting the right to peaceably retake the property, still no prejudicial error was *387committed in sustaining demurrers to them; for the reason that every count to which they were addressed carried material averment of fact, which, if established as plaintiffs undertook the burden to do, negatived a peaceable retaking of the property by the defendants. The first count was the weaker one in this respect. It alleged that the property was taken against his will and over his protest and that the taking was done in a rude and rough manner. Any act or action manifesting force or violence, or naturally calculated to provide a breach of the peace, in the recaption of property renders the actor a trespasser,' and precludes him from availing of his right to retake the property. To enter one’s premises, and notwithstanding the possessor’s protest, and in a rude and rough manner to take chattels against his will, is, we think, clearly not an assertion of a right in a peaceable manner. The defendant’s plea, in this connection, could have added nothing to their defense; the plaintiff having assumed the burden to affirmatively establish a state of fact rendering the matter of the pleas unavailable to the defendants.
(4, 5) There is no merit in the assignment predicated of the ruling made during the examination of the witness Salter. Subsequently the question disallowed by the court was answered, in substance, by the witness. The only other ruling on the admission of evidence of which complaint is made cannot be found at the page reference in the assignment. It is not sufficiently otherwise so identified therein as to invoke review of any particular ruling.
(6) To maintain an action of trespass, committed in the wrongful taking of personal property, it is not necessary to prove the employment of actual force. — Gibbs v. Chase, 10 Mass. 125; Miller v. Baker, 1 Metc. *388(Mass.) 27; Dexter v. Cole, 6 Wis. 319, 70 Am. Dec. 465; 2 Jaggard on Torts, pp. 660-662.
(7) In describing the taking of the property, the several counts, other than the first, count, use the term “force” in connection with the averment that the taking was against the will and without the consent of the plaintiff, in whose rightful possession he contends the property was. We do not interpret the term “force,” tiras employed, as asserting the application of actual' force or physical violence to the person of'the plaintiff. If the term .(force) was interpreted as asserting the use of a force of a different character from that the law implies as upon-, the unjustified taking of an-' other’s property from his possession, there was evidence tending to show the utterance of threats, under era cumstances reasonably calculated to impress the object of .them with, the belief of the present existence of ability tq execute them, the natural 'effect of which were to. constitute- constructive force in such sort as" to compel the submission of the- plaintiff, against his' will, to the appropriation- of what he asserted to be ' his property. — See Shepherd's Case, 135 Ala. 9, 33 South. 266. Hence there was no. error in refusing to' the defendant the general affirmative charge on the theory that there was failure of proof in respect of the forde alleged.
(8) Charge 3 was properly refused. It invaded the jury’s province. There Avas evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had, previous to the alleged trespass, fully paid for the property; and, if so he had, the contractual right to retake the property did not then exist.
(9) It Avas not error to. refuse charge 10, requested by the defendant. As set out in the bill of exceptions, it is unintelligible.
*389There being no merit in the errors assigned and insisted upon in brief, the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Anderson, C. J., and Sayre and Gardner, JJ., concur.