Luddington v. Goodnow

Holmes, J.

This is an action for the conversion of certain chattels in and about the Grand Opera House in Boston. The chattels had belonged to Mansfield and Magee, copartners and lessees of the Grand Opera House. The plaintiff claimed under' a sale by Magee of his half to Mansfield, and a later sale of the whole by Mansfield to the plaintiff. Mansfield surrendered the lease to the defendant, and the defendant took possession of the theatre and the property. The case was tried before a judge without a jury, and he found for the plaintiff, subject to three exceptions, which are to be considered.

1. The first concerns the purchase by Mansfield from Magee. By an instrument under seal, executed by them upon dissolving the partnership, Magee agreed that he would “ not take or claim any part, share, or interest in said business, or interfere in any way therewith.” Testimony was admitted under exception, that, after the instrument was executed, Mansfield noticed that the property in question was not mentioned, and spoke about it in the office of the lawyer who drew the instrument; that Magee said they would have no more trouble about it, and that both agreed that *225there was no need of drawing the instrument over again. It is objected that this was an attempt to modify the specialty by contemporaneous talk. But the testimony warranted a finding that the oral agreement was subsequent to the execution of the paper, and if the paper did not cover the property, operated by way of gift, followed as it was by possession, or of sale in consideration of Mansfield’s abandoning a claim to have the instrument modified, and therefore the evidence properly was let in.

2. The next exception is to a refusal to rule that the plaintiff had not made out a case. The particulars relied on concern the plaintiff’s present right of possession, and the conversion by the defendant. The plaintiff, after the sale by Mansfield to him, took possession, and then took from Mansfield an instrument by which the latter purported to hire the property at a monthly rent for a year, with a right to repurchase for seven hundred dollars. Later, Mansfield notified the plaintiff that he was not in possession of the Grand Opera House. This fairly might be found to import what no doubt it meant, a surrender to the plaintiff of Mansfield’s rights under the lease. Hardy v. Reed, 6 Cush. 252. The plaintiff thereupon went to the theatre, which was closed, saw the defendant at the door, and demanded his property. The defendant seems to have answered somewhat ambiguously, but there was evidence that he said that all property there belonged to Mansfield, and that he held it for unpaid rent. It is a fair inference that, although he tried to avoid an up and down refusal and advised the plaintiff to consult a lawyer, he did refuse, in substance, to give up the goods, and asserted an adverse title of his own. The ruling asked properly was refused.

3. The judge assessed the damages at over twelve hundred dollars. This was more than the ad damnum in the writ, which was one thousand dollars. Thereupon the plaintiff moved to amend his ad damnum to fifteen hundred dollars, and this was allowed, subject to the exception and appeal of the defendant. The allowance was within the power of the judge. Pub. Sts. c. 167, § 42. Ellis v. Ridgway, 1 Allen, 501. .The matter at issue was not determined by the ad damnum, which necessarily was conjectural, but by the allegation and denial that the defendant had converted certain chattels to his own use.

Hxceptions overruled.