This is an action of trespass de *199bonis, &c., prosecuted by Bodman against Grisham and Mason. The goods were taken by Grisham as sheriff under a writ of attachment, and Mason was his indemnitor in respect of the levy. This #rit issued at the suit of Watson against Kirby & Sons, and. was levied on the property as belongi.,g to the latter, though it was at' the time in the possession of Bodman, to whom Kirby & Sons had just "previously sold it in payment of a debt, as was-alleged. The defendants sought to justify under the writ, averring that the sale and transfer by. Kirby & Sons to Bodman was made ‘ ‘for the purpose' of hindering, delaying and defrauding said Watson and the other creditors of Kirby & Sons,” &c., and was, therefore, fraudulent and void, &c. This was the only defense attempted to be made, and it utterly failed on the evidence. One essential constituent, of it, that Watson was a creditor of Kirby & Sons, was not only not proved on the trial, but was affirmatively disproved; it was not only not shown that at the time of the sale and transfer by Kirby & Sons to Bodman, the former were indebted to Watson, but, to the contrary, it was clearly shown by the pleadings and judgment in the attachment suit that they were not indebted to him at that time. The indebtedness claimed by Watson was nine hundred dollars for a lot of logs which he alleged in his complaint in the attachment suit he sold to Kirby & Sons on November 6th, 1894, and for which, he further alleged, they promised to pay him at the price of five dollars per thousand feet, and that the logs measured 20,000 feet, “making the amount due him $1,000, on which Kirby & Sons had paid him $100,” leaving the balance sued for. To this complaint, the defendants, Kirby & Sons pleaded recoupment. This plea was sustained on the trial, and the defendants upon it had judgment over against Watson for $127.37. It is insisted by counsel for appellants that this judgment was not evidence that Kirby & Sons did not owe Watson- the demand upon which the attachment suit was brought; for, it is argued, that the judgment “shows that it was rendered against Watson on defendants’ plea of set-off, whereby it was admitted that the plaintiff had a good cause of action, a debt against Kirby & Sons, which was defeated only by the plea of set-off, which may or may not be interposed by the defendant,” &c. All this maybe conceded in re*200spect of a plea of set-off and judgment sustaining it. That plea does, indeed, confess the debt sued on, but says plaintiff ought not to have judgment therefor because he owes the defendant a debt which the latter elects and offers to set off against the claim in suit. But counsel overlooked the fact that the plea here was not set-off at all, but recoupment, a very different defense; the gist and essence of which is that the defendant does not owe the claim sued on because in and about the transaction out of which plaintiff’s supposed and relied on cause of action arose, he has suffered such damages through plaintiff’s violations of his obligations and omissions of duties in the premises as when put against what plaintiff would have been entitled to recover but for such omissions and infractions reduce or destroy his claim. Recoupment is not merely a cross action, as is set-off; the plea does not confess the indebtedness counted on in the complaint and bring forward a counter indebtedness from the plaintiff t,o the defendant, as does the plea of set off; but its proposition is that plaintiff’s claim is based upon a particular contract or transaction, that to entitle the plaintiff to the sum he claims it was upon him to comply with certain obligations of the contract or to discharge certain duties which the law imposed upon him in the making or performing of the contract, that he has failed to comply with such obligations or to discharge such duties, and that thereby the defendant has been so damaged in the particular transaction, or in respect of the particular contract, that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover; or, in other words, that the plaintiff has no debt or a less debt than he claims, as the case may be, against the defendant. For, as said by Christiancy, J. : “A defense by way of recoupment denies the validity of the plaintiff’s cause of action to so large an amount as he plaims. It is not an independent cross claim like a separate and distinct debt or item of account due from the plaintiff, but is confined to matters arising out of, or connected with, the transaction or contract which forms the basis of-plaintiff’s action. It goes only in abatement or reduction of plaintiff’s claim, and can be used as a substitute only to the extent of plaintiff’s demand. ’ No judgment can be obtained by the defendant for any balance in his favor.” — McHardy v. Wadsworth, 8 Mich. 349; Waterman on Set Off,p.482, § 466. *201And so it is said by the Supreme Court of Georgia : ‘ ‘The doctrine of recoupment is but a liberal and beneficial improvoment upon the old doctrine of failure of consideration. It looks through the whole contract, treating „ it as an entirety, and treating the things done and stipulated to be done on one side as the consideration for the things done or stipulated to be done on the other.” — Lufburrow v. Henderson, 30 Ga. 482. While recoupment is at common law in some sense a means of enforcing a cause' of action by the defendant against plaintiff, either wholly or partially as the defendant’s claim for damages may or may not be less than plaintiff’s demand, yet such cause of action is enforced not as ’an independent claim or debt of the defendant, but by way merely of cutting off, reducing the plaintiff’s claim, so that the effect and result of a plea of recoupment sustained is an adjudication that to the extent of the sum recouped the plaintiff had no claim or debt. “For,” as said by Mr. Parsons, “the essential difference between recoupment or reduction on the one hand, and set-off on the other , is that in set-off the ground taken by the defendant is that he may owe the plaintiff what lie claims; but that a part or the whole of the debt is paid in reason and justice by a distinct and unconnected debt which th.e plaintiff owes him,” * * * while on a plea of recoupment, “a defendant may deduct from the plaintiff’s claim all just demands or claims owned by him, or payments made by him, in the very same transaction, or even in other but closely connected transactions. They must, however, be so connected as fairly to authorize the defendant to say that he does not owe the plaintiff on that cause of action, so much as he seeks, and not that he ought not to pay the plaintiff so much, because on another cause of action the plaintiff owes him. If he can so present and use his claims, he diminishes the plaintiff’s claim by way of reduction.” — 2 Parsons on Contr., pp. 862-3. And this doctrine that recoupment goes, not to the effectuation of a counter claim as a set-off against plaintiff’s demand, but in diminution, reduction and, it may be, to the destruction of plaintiff’s claim or cause of action has been long recognized in this State, (Peden v. Moore, 1 Stew. & Port. 71; Hatchett & Bro. v. Gibson, 13 Ala. 587) ; so unequivocally and fully ind'eed that, *202prior to the present statute which seems to contemplate or require a special plea, at least when a recovery over is sought, it was settled that this defense could be made under the general issue, which is a mere denial of the pl.'.intiff’s cause of action. — English v. Wilson, 34 Ala. 201. In Washington v. Timberlake, 74 Ala. 259, 263, it is said: “Recoupment applies when the abatement claimed springs out of the very contract or transaction on which the recovery is sought. It is entirely unlike set-off, which is in the nature of a cross action, and may rest on an independent legal demand, if that demand be of a class not sounding in damages merely.” And in Mayberry v. Leach, 58 Ala. 339, the doctrine is thus stated: “A defense byway of recoupment, denies the validity of .plaintiff’s cause of action, to so large an amount as he claims. It is not an independent cross demand, like a separate and distinct debt or item due from the defendant, but is confined to matters arising out of or connected with the contract or transaction which forms the basis of plaintiff’s claim.” It is clear,, therefore, upon principle and upon our own cases, as well as other authorities, that this defense, unaffected by statute, goes to the validity, the existence of the plaintiff’s alleged debt or demand, and that, of consequence, a judgment for the defendant upon such plea (which our statute provides for) is a judgment against the existence of the claim sued on. Our statute, to which reference has just been made, provides that the defendant may have judgment simply, where the amount recouped equals plaintiff’s claim, and judgment over, where such amount exceeds plaintiff’s demand, (Code, § 2683) ; but the operation of this statute, its effect upon the defense of recoupment, has been expressly limited to the rendition of judgment for the defendant in the specified cases. — Martin v. Broten, 75 Ala. 442; Ewing v. Shaw, 83 Ala. 333. A comparison of this statute with section 2679 of the Code serves to further sustain the position we have announced as to the nature of the defense of recoupment, by showing that on a plea of set-off the defendant is not entitled to judgment unless his cross demand exceeds the claim of the plaintiff, while in recoupment the defendant has judgment if his claim equal or exceed plaintiff’s demand. Now'the only possible reason for this distinction is — and it is a perfectly
L *203sound one — that in set-off the plaintiff has a debt against the defendant, is entitled to sue for its collection, and notwithstanding it may be satisfied by setting off against it an equal debt of the plaintiff against him, he yet recovers in a sense by the contemporaneous satisfaction of the counter claim, and hence is entitled to a judgment carrying costs; while in recoupment, if the damages brought forward by the defendant equal the plaintiff’s alleged debt, they destroy it, not by way of satisfaction, but by way of demonstrating that it does not exist and did not exist when the suit was brought; so that the theory is that, having no debt when he sued, he had no right to sue, and is not entitled to a judgment carrying costs.
It is quite true that a defendant is not bound in general to set up matter in recoupment, and that, omitting to do so,he may afterwards,proceed by independent action to recover the damages which he might have recouped against the plaintiff. But we are unable to see why these considerations should have any bearing on the effect of a judgment rendered in defendant’s favor when he elects to plead recoupment, and his plea is sustained. He might by failing to interpose the plea allow the plaintiff to establish a debt against him, just the same result might ensue from his failure to plead non est factum in an action against him on a forged promissory note ; but if he does make the defense and it is sustained, the judgment is as conclusive against the existence of the alleged debt in the one case as the other.
Watson, therefore, not being a creditor of Kirby & Sons, the sale and transfer of the subsequently attached property by the latter could not be fraudulent and void as to him, whatever may have been its infirmities as between Kirby & Sons and Bodman, on the one hand, and creditors of the former, on the other ; and not only does the special plea of justification, based on the writ and the supposed invalidity of the sale by Kirby & Sons to Bodman, fail of support in the evidence; -but the plea of not guilty considered solely as a bar and defense to the action intoto is also lacking in support by the evidence. As between Watson and Bodman, the latter had a perfect title and the rightful possession of the property taken by the defendants. The writ against Kirby & Sons afforded them no justification for the taking. They were *204trespassers pure and simple, though not willful or wanton traspassers ; and the court did not err in saying to the jury that the only question for their consideration went to the. measure of damages to be awarded the plaintiff.
But the trial judge, in our opinion, did err in several particulars bearing upon this matter of the measure of damages to which plaintiff was entitled. It is a thoroughly well settled doctrine of the law of trespass, that under the general issue a defendant may put in evidence, in mitigation of damages, the fact that the property which he has wrongfully taken from the plaintiff has been returned to the plaintiff, or has been applied for the benefit or advantage of the plaintiff with his consent, express or implied, or through legal proceedings instituted by third persons ; and that to the extent such application has been made, the recovery, which ordinarily would be the value of the property, is mitigated and reduced. This rule finds its most frequent illustration in cases where the property has been attached or levied upon in the hands of the trespassers by creditors of the plaintiff in trespass, or subjected to the satisfaction of some mortgage or other lien held by third persons, as against said plaintiff upon it. — Hopple v. Higbee, 3 Zab. (N. J.) 342; Stewart v. Martin, 16 Vt. 397; Kaley v. Shed, 10 Metc. (Mass.) 317; City of Lowell v. Parker, Ib. 309 ; Montgomery v. Wilson, 48 Vt. 616 ; Bird v. Womack, 69 Ala. 390; Keith v. Ham, 89 Ala. 594; Street v. Sinclair, 71 Ala. 110.
But the rule we have stated is based upon a principle which is broader than is illustrated in the cases we have just cited. It is that a plaintiff in trespass for the mere wrongful, as distinguished from wrongful and malicious, taking of property, is entitled to recover the value of his interest only in the property of which the trespass has deprived him. If, notwithstanding the trespass, the full value of the property, or of his interest in it, as the case may .be,'has directly or indirectly inurea to his benefit, it cannot be said that he has been materially damaged, and his recovery would be nominal. If his interest is less than the whole, his damage would be gauged accordingly, however this diminution may have occurred. If it came to him in such a lyay as to be charged with any outstanding right existing between his vendor *205and a third person whereby such third person is entitled to subject it to a demand he has against such vendor, and it is bv him-while in the hands of the trespasser subjected to such demand, the amount of it is to be deducted from the value of the property in the assessment of the damages to which plaintiff in trespass is entitled. Or, in other words, trespass being an offense against the possession, and maintainable by one who may have possession and only a qualified title, or even rightful possession alone, if he is not the owner, his recovery may be tolled by so much of the value of the property as has been applied to the use of the owner through the interposition of such third person under his right against the owner. Upon those considerations is laid down the proposition by Mr. Waterman : “The defendant may show in mitigation of damages that the property did not belong to the plaintiff, and that it was applied for the benefit of the owner.” The cases cited above involved applications for the benefit of the plaintiff in trespass. The principle upon which mitigation is allowed on that account also embraces the application of the property for the benefit of the owner though he be not the plaintiff in the action. Now, in the present case evidence was offered tending to show that third parties, Harris Brothers, were creditors of Kirby & Sons at the time the latter sold and transferred this property to Bodman, the plaintiff, that this sale and trausfer was fraudulent and void so far as Harris Brothers were concerned, and, of consequence, they had as against Bodman the right to subject the property to the payment of their debts against Ivirby & Sons, and that they attached the property after it had been wrongfully taken by the defendants and sold the same, applying the proceeds to the payment of their debt against plaintiff’s vendor. Assuming the state of case which this evidence went to prove, Kirby & Sons were the owners of the property so far as Harris Brothers were concerned, and the interest of Bodman in it was sécondary to the claim of Harris Brothers; he indeed had no interest except in that part of it which remained after they had realized their debt out of it; and in so far as they applied it to the payment of their debt against Kirby & Sons, it went to the use and benefit of the owner, and to that extent Bodman’s claim for damages was less than the value of the proper y wrongfully *206taken by the defendants, and should be mitigated accordingly. The cases on this application of the pi-ineiple are not numerous, but they support the text quoted above, are satisfactory in their reasoning and have never been challenged, that we are aware of, but, to the contrary, have been frequently approved'. One is the case of Squire v. Hollenbeck, 9 Pick. (Mass.) 551, an action of trespass for the taking of a horse. Tire plaintiff' proved that the defendant took the animal out of plaintiff’s possession. “The defendant offered to prove that the property was in [a third, person] one Crippen, and that one Baldwin, [also a third party] being a creditor of Crippen, caused the mare to be attached by a deputy sheriff, and taken out of defendant’s possession, and that the mare was sold according to law and the proceeds applied to the proper debt of Crippen. The defendant was a stranger claiming to set up the property of Crippen, in mitigation of damages, without any authority from Crippen to act for him.” The trial judge ruled against the admission of this evidence offered by defendant; and on appeal, die Supreme Court of Massachusetts said : “It is clear that it is not competent to a defendant in trespass for the taking of goods, to plead property in a stranger, and upon sound principle ; for the trespass maybe an injury to the possession. The question to be-considered is, whether, if the property comes to the use of the owner, evidence of that fact may nob be received in mitigation of damages; and we all think it may be. The reason why a party having possession should maintain trespass is, that he may have sustained -injury by being deprived of the goods ; nor should- his claim of damages be construed strictly. Ordinarily he is either the owner or answerable over to the owner ; and in either case he is entitled not only to damages for the taking, but'also for the value of the goods. Possession is prima facie evidence of title, and unless the contrary is shown, it is sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover for the value. But here, if the allegation of the defendant can be made out by proof, the plaintiff is not answerable over. The real damage then sustained by him, arises from the injury to his special property,and he ought not to recover for the value of the mare. The evidence which was rejected ought to be received, and the burden will rest on the defendant to prove satisfactorily the fact *207alleged, in order to justify a reduction of the damages.” It does not appear by the report of this case of 'Squire v. 'Hollenbeck whether or not the title was in Crippen as between him, Baldwin, the creditor and the plaintiff in trespass on the theory that the latter was a fraudulent transferee of Crippen ; but that is aif immaterial consideration, as is demonstrated by the later case of Perry v. Chandler, 2 Cush. (Mass.) 237, where the facts are epitomized in the headnote as follows : “Personal property, under mortgage, and in the possession of the mortgagee, was attached on mesne process by a creditor of the mortgagor,and taken into the custody of the officer,the creditor then instituted proceedings against the mortgag- or in the district court, upon which he was adjudged a bankrupt, and the attaching officer was appointed his assignee ; the mortgaged property was subsequently sold by the assignee, under a license from the district court, and the proceeds distributed among the creditors of the bankrupt; and, upon the petition of the assignee, the mortgage was declared null and void, by the district court, as having been in contravention of the bankrupt law, and ordered to be delivered up to the assignee to be cancelled;” and upon these facts the court held that an action of trespass by the mortgagee against the sheriff, for the act of his deputy in attaching the mortgaged property, might be maintained; but the defendant might show the subsequent proceedings in mitigation of damages and thereby confine the recovery' to nominal damages only. The court said : “In the case of Pierce v. Benjamin, 14 Pick. 356, where the action of trespass was maintained, the sale of the property being held illegal, yet the defendant was allowed to give in evidence the application of the proceeds to the payment of taxes due from the plaintiff, in reduction of the damages. In the case of Kaley v. Shed, 10 Met. 317, the defendant was allowed to show, in mitigation of damages, that the property had been taken from him by an attachment in an action against the plaintiff as the plaintiff’s property. The case of Squire v. Hollenbeck, 9 Pick. 551, is more in point, because it presents a case, where, as in the case at bar, the avails of the property did not go to the use or benefit of the plaintiff. The damages were allowed to be reduced, by showing that a third person had an interest in the property ; and that although the possession *208of the plaintiff was violated, for which violation he might maintain an action; yet that there was a third person having a paramount title, and that the avails of the property, or the property itself, had gone to his use. The application of the principle, which was settled in that case, seems to authorize (lie ground assumed by the defendant, in the present case, as to 'lie reduction of the damages.” The foregoing case is substantially the same as the one at bar on the question under consideration. The defendant was allowed to mitigate damages against the plaintiff in trespass by showing that the latter was a purchaser from a third party, that the purchase money was paid to the creditors of such third party and that the avails of the property had been applied to the use of the debtor as the owner thereof by way of paying his debts in whole or in part. These cases have been frequently reaffirmed by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, and have received the approval of text writers. — Bartlett v. Kidder, 16 Gray, 278; City of Lowell v. Parker, 10 Metc. 309; Kaley v. Shed, 10 Metc. 317; King v. Bangs, 120 Mass. 514; Dahill v. Booker, 140 Mass. 308; 1 Waterman on Trespass, §§ 616, 617; 2 Green. Ev., §§ 272, 616, 635a.
The defendants should, therefore, have been allowed to show that the property which they wrongfully took from the plaintiff had to some extent been rightfully appropriated by Harris Brothers to the satisfaction of their claim against Kirby & Sons, and the evidence offered by them *to this end, tending to show that Kirby & Sons were indebted to Harris Brothers at the time of the sale and transfer of this property by the former to Bodman, that said sale and transfer were fraudulent and void as to the creditors of Kirby & Sons, and that the property, or some part of it, had been applied to í¿ie payment of Harris Brothers’ debt, and thus to the use of the owner thereof, should have been received in mitigation of damages. It was error to exclude from the jury all the evidence going to show fraud in said sale and transfer, which had been admitted, but was subsequently ruled out on plaintiff’s motion, and to exclude the writ of attachment and sheriff’s return thereon in the case of Harris Brothers v. Kirby & Sons, offered to show that this property was also levied on in that case and sold to pay Harris Brother’s debt.
*209It is unnecessary to discuss tlie charges given and refused in detail. The part of the court’s oral charge to which an exception was ’ eserved is sound and would have been so had all the evidence improperly excluded been admitted. With this evidence in, some of the charges refused to defendants should be given. Charge 3 is in this category, and may be charge 4, though the interpolation of the words “like crime” therein might justify its refusal. Charges 1 and 2 would have been improper with all the proposed evidence in. Charge 5 is abstract because the facts hypothesized are not in the abstract.
Reversed and remanded.