Gilbert v. Dickerson

By the Court,

Sutherland, J.

If the plaintiff and defendant were tenants in common in the horse, there can be no question that the action cannot be maintained upon the evidence in this case. A tenant in common cannot maintain trover against his co-tenant, without proving a loss, destruction or sale of the article by such co-tenant. Barnardistone v. Chapman, Bull. N. P. 34, 5. St. John v. Standring, 2 Johns. R. 468. Wilson & Gibbs v. Reed, 3 Johns. R. 175. Fenning v. Lord Grenville, 1 Taunt. 241. It is not sufficient to maintain the action, that the one tenant has obtained the exclusive possession of the chattel, and claims to be the sole owner, and refuses to deliver it up to his co-tenant, or to permit him to share in the possession. Lyttleton, 1 Inst. 199, b. § 323, illustrates the rule, by putting the very case now at bar. He says, “ If two be possessed of chattels personal in common, by divers titles, as of a horse, an ox, or a cow, if the one takes the whole to himself out of the possession of the other, the other hath no other remedy but to take this from him who hath done the wrong, to occupy in common, when he can see his time.” And Coke, in his commentary on this passage, reiterates it with approbation. 1 Inst. 200, a. I have found no case in which it has been intimated that the assumption of an exclu*451give right on the part of the defendant, or a denial of the plaintiff’s title as tenant in common, was equivalent, in judgment of law, to a loss or destruction of the article. Such was the fact in the case of St. John v. Standring; and in Fenning v. Lord Grenville, the action was brought for the conversion of a whale, by the defendant, of which the plaintiff claimed to be joint owner. The defendant had cut up the whale and made it into oil. Still, it was held, that this was not such a destruction of the subject matter as to sustain the action of trover, because the plaintiff could také and use the commodity in its altered state. The defendant in this case locked up the horse, claiming him to be his exclusive property. This is not sufficient, within the preceding authorities, to sustain trover by one tenant in common against another..]

The plaintiff’s witnesses shewed that the defendant claimed to have purchased the horse from John P. Barnard, who is admitted to have been the joint owner with the plaintiff. When the demand was made upon him by the plaintiff, he stated the fact that he had purchased the whole of the horse from John P. Barnard, and paid him $200. In am inclined to think that this, coming out from the plaintiff’s own witnesses, and being a part of the same conversation on which the plaintiff relied as evidence of the conversion, is to be considered as competent evidence of the plaintiff’s interest in the horse, and shews him to have been a tenant in common with the plaintiff. It does not appear that the sale from John P. Barnard to Eli Barnard was prior to that to the defendant; the presumption is, as the defendant had the possession, the sale to him was first made.

In actions ex delicto, the non-joinder of a party plaintiff can be taken advantage of only by plea in abatement, or by way of apportionment of the damages^on the trial. 1 Wendell, 881, and the cases there cited.

New trial denied.