Court Opinion

ID: 8263495
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:57:57.971054+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:15.580740
License: Public Domain

REYBURN, J.
In August, 1899, plaintiff delivered to defendant, a public warehouseman, in the city of St. Louis, a quantity of household goods and chattels for storage at rate of six dollars per month. About a year prior thereto, plaintiff had executed and delivered to one Little, a chattel mortgage upon the same personalty to secure an indebtedness of fifty dollars due sixty days after date; the property being then contained in and comprising the furniture and household equipment of dwellings numbers 615 and 617 South Broadway, St. Louis, where plaintiff was conducting rooming houses. In January, 1900, defendant advertised the sale of the goods for default in the charges, purporting to act under the provisions' of section 8482, Revised Statutes 1899, vol. 2, but no sale was then made, nor until February 23d, following, when without notice to or knowledge of plaintiff, and without conforming to the statutory requirements, the property was disposed of by defendant. The latter sale was alleged to have been made at directions of a minor son of plaintiff, whose authority, as her agent, was repudiated by plaintiff.
1. After condition broken, but prior to demand for possession by the mortgagee and in advance also of possession taken by the latter, the mortgagor may maintain an action for conversion of the mortgaged property by a stranger. Upon default in payment of the mortgage indebtedness or other breach of the covenants of the mortgage (for example, the removal of the property from the Broadway houses to the premises of defendant), the mortgagee could have exercised the .right reserved to him therein, and taking possession of the *133property have proceeded to enforce the power of- sale thereunder, hut there is no evidence that the mortgagee sought to enforce the terms of the mortgage, and it is conceded that the sale of the mortgaged property was not made under the conditional right of sale therein. Until the mortgagee saw fit to put in operation the provisions of the mortgage, the rights of the plaintiff in the property, subject to the rights of the mortgagee, continued; even if the latter had taken possession of the property, and made sale without compliance with the terms of sale provided by the mortgage, he could have been held to account for the market value. Tobener v. Hassinbusch, 56 Mo. App. 591; Buddington v. Mastbrook, 17 Mo. App. 577.
2. The court of its own motion gave the following instruction to the jury:
“If you believe from the evidence that defendant sold the property in question without any authority or consent from plaintiff, then you should return a verdict for plaintiff for such sum as you may find from the evidence the property which was stored with defendant and sold was reasonably worth at the date of sale, with interest at six per cent from February 23, 1900, the- date of sale, you will compute the interest and add it to the-principal and render one aggregate sum in your verdict. If, however, you believe from the evidence that plaintiff did not pay the mortgage to Mr. Little, but that same was paid out of proceeds of sale, then you should, deduct the amount paid on such mortgage from the damages you find for plaintiff; you should also allow defendant such sum as the evidence shows he was entitled to for storage and charges, and'deduct same from the damages of plaintiff.”
This action was ex delicto and not ex contractu, being for the conversion of the household property stored with defendant. Section 2869, Eevised Statutes 1899, formerly section 4430, has been declared but the enactment of the common-law rule in this State and *134raising no presumption not already existing. As a genera] rule interest is not allowable in actions sounding in tort for unliquidated damages. Under the above statute the allowance of interest as an element of damages in addition to the value of the goods at the time of their conversion is wholly committed to the discretion of the jury. Carson v. Smith, 133 Mo. 606. The jury may, if they see fit, allow interest in their award of damages, but the statute leaves entirely to the jury, in its discretion, to give interest or not under the proof in the case, but this instruction wrests from the jury such discretionary power, and peremptorily directs the computation of interest upon the value of the property and*' the rendition of the aggregate of the principal and interest as the verdict. “Whatever the rule may have been in the absence of any statutory ■ enactment, there is now no room for doubt. Language could not be plainer. The manifest intention of the Legislature by this statute is, that in this class of cases, the question of interest as damages should be for the jury and not for the court.” State ex rel. v. Hope, 121 Mo. 34; Vermillion v. LeClare, 89 Mo. App. 55.
The verdict for $373.98, obviously in obedience to the instruction above quoted, embraces principal and interest computed at the statutory rate therein named. It seems to us that the ends of justice will be promoted and subserved by affording plaintiff an opportunity to rectify the error of the lower court in remitting the excess. It is therefore ordered that if within ten days from the date of the filing of this opinion, the plaintiff ■shall enter in this court a remittitur of $58.98, the judgment shall stand affirmed for $315; but if such remittitur be not entered within the period fixed, then the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Bland, P. J., and Goode, J., concur.