The facts material in this case are as follows: The action was brought to recover the value of forty-two bushels of wheat. The plaintiff introduced a witness, one Wright, who testified that in 1854 he was told by the plaintiff to take his (plaintiff's) thresher and go and thresh out one Pickard's wheat; that he went and threshed out the wheat on Pickard's land, and on the following day, in obedience to the plaintiff's instructions, he carried the wheat to defendant's mill and told him to keep it until plaintiff called for it, to which the defendant assented.
The defendant then offered a witness to prove that Pickard was the owner of the wheat in question, and that it had been ground into flour, by his order, and taken from the mill by him, and that this occurred before any demand was made by the plaintiff on the defendant for the same. The plaintiff objected to this evidence, upon the ground that the defendant, having accepted the wheat as a bailment from the plaintiff, was estopped to deny the plaintiff's title to it. His Honor being of opinion with the plaintiff, rejected the evidence. Defendant excepted.
The defendant denied the contract of bailment with the plaintiff as sworn to by Wright, and offered to show that the title was in Pickard, as evidence from which the jury might determine with whom the contract of bailment had been made by defendant. His Honor ruled out the evidence, upon the ground that evidence of the title could furnish no aid to the jury upon the question of bailment. Defendant excepted.
Verdict for plaintiff. Judgment. Appeal by defendant. *Page 97 We are clearly of opinion that his Honor erred in rejecting the testimony which was offered on the trial, to show that Pickard, and not the plaintiff, was the owner of the wheat in controversy, and that he had demanded and received it from the defendant before the plaintiff's demand and suit. If Pickard were the real owner of the article, could the plaintiff's act of bailing it to the defendant prevent Pickard from claiming it and recovering its value, if it were withheld from him by the defendant? Surely not. No man can be thus deprived of the right of demanding his property from any person who has possession of it and retains it against his will. The refusal of the possessor to deliver it upon such a demand would be evidence of a conversion, for which, if unexplained, the owner would be entitled to recover the full value of his property. If, then, the possessor cannot upon the ground of his being the bailee of another person, resist the claim of the true owner, his surrender of the article to the owner must necessarily be a defense against the action of the bailor, founded upon the charge of a conversion of the property. It may be that the bailor might recover something in an action of assumpsit for the breach of the contract of bailment, but the law cannot be so hard as to render the bailee liable for the full value of the article, both to the owner and bailor, upon the ground of a conversion as to both. The true doctrine on the subject is announced in Pitt v. Albritton, 34 N.C. 74, and is in accordance with the view which we have taken of the present case.
There are, indeed, some cases, in which the true owner is not known and where there is no probability of his appearing and making claim, where the courts would sustain the action of trover in favor of a bailor against a wrongfully recusant bailee. See Armory v. Delamere, 1 Stra., 505; Craig v. Miller, 34 N.C. 375. In such cases, to allow the justertii to be set up as a defense to the action of the bailor would enable the bailee to keep the property without accounting for its value to anybody, and thus be rewarded for his breach of faith. But (127) the rule of law must necessarily be different where the owner comes forward and demands the article and is ready to prove a title which cannot be gainsaid or resisted. Such was the present case, and the judge ought to have permitted the defendant to show, if he could, that he had delivered the article to the true owner, and, consequently, had not converted it as against his bailor.
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
Cited: Skinner v. Maxwell, 66 N.C. 47. *Page 98