Haughawout v. Royse

ELLISON, J.

This is an action for damages which a.re alleged to have resulted to the plaintiffs by reason of the following* matters as set forth in their petition. They allege that they were the OAvners of a set of abstract books and furniture in an abstract office, subject to two chattel mortgages. That the books Avere in possession of defendant and that it was agreed between them that if plaintiffs would pay and discharge the mortgages, de*75fendant would deliver up to them the abstract books, etc. That plaintiffs paid the mortgages as agreed, but defendant only delivered up a portion of the books and other items. Plaintiffs then brought an action of replevin against defendant for the books not delivered to them wherein they asked for possession and for damages. The sheriff was unable to find the property for the reason that this defendant had wrongfully delivered them to one, John Funk. When plaintiffs made their agreement with defendant whereby, on payment of the mortgages, defendant would deliver them the property they supposing they would soon become possessed of it, made a, contract with one, G. B. Gregg, obligating themselves to deliver them to Gregg. Plaintiffs failing to get their property in their replevin against this defendant, as just stated, and being pressed with a sense of their obligation to deliver them to Gregg as they agreed they would do before they knew they themselves would fail to get them, they began a replevin action against Funk for the possession of the property so wrongfully turned over to him by this defendant. The sheriff could find only a portion of that property. Plaintiffs, realizing that they were being further foiled and delayed in getting the property so that they could themselves deliver to Gregg, procured the consent of Funk to make known where the property was and to deliver it up, by paying him (Funk) $125 in money and cancelling his interest in one-half of $200 in accounts, making $225 paid to Funk. In addition to this they paid out $175 in prosecuting the suit against Funk for attorney’s fees and travelling expenses. Plaintiffs thereupon filed an amended petition in their replevin action against this defendant setting up the claim they here sue upon in this action as a part of their damages. This defendant, as defendant in the replevin suit, made his motion in the court in which the action was pending to strike out the claim as not being* relevant and that it did “not constitute proper elements of dam*76age.” The court sustained the motion. The replevin action then went to judgment in plaintiff’s favor, stripped of that part of the claim for damages.

Thereafter plaintiffs brought the present action for damages against the defendant in which they make claim for the same damages that were stricken out of their amended petition in replevin, as just stated. Their petition sets up the facts substantially as we have stated them. The defendant made the plea of res ad judicata, claiming that the cause of action now alleged was adjudicated by the action of the court in striking it from the amended petition in the former replevin action, and that it became finally determined against the plaintiffs and could not now be made the subject of another action. The trial court sustained that view and plaintiffs appealed.

Whether the damages suffered by plaintiffs by reason of their expenditures in getting the property from Funk could be properly allowed to plaintiffs in their replevin suit against defendant, we need not say. Stated differently, we do not consider it necessary to decide whether the court ruled correctly on the motion to strike out the claim. The reason is this, that admitting they were properly allowable in that action, this defendant, by taking the position that they were not and having the court, at his instance, to strike them out, is now, in this separate action, estopped from claiming that they are res adjudicada. He ca.used them to be thrown out of the other case because, as he claimed, they were not properly there to be adjudicated, and he ought not now' be permitted to say they were adjudicated. [Ruckelschus v. Oehme, 48 N. J. Eq. 436, 444; Phinney v. Earl, 9 Johns. 352; Michels v. Olmstead, 157 U. S. 198, 201.] It is a rule in this State that litigants must not place themselves in inconsistent positions. [Bensieck v. Cook, 110 Mo. 182.]

But, aside from the proposition of law just stated, *77when the trial court ruled that the matters of damage set up in the amended petition could not be allowed in an action of replevin and struck out that portion of the pleading setting up such damage, it became an adjudication to that effect, and became, so far as such damages were concerned, res adjudicaba, binding upon both parties. Such damages then, so far as this case is concerned, were foreign to the action of replevin and not having been tried they may be made the subject of another action. ' [Bell v. Hoagland, 15 Mo. 361; Jamison v. Martin, 184 Mo. 422, 428.] The fact the ruling was on a motion does not alter the rule. [Johnson v. Latta, 84 Mo. 139; Railroad v. Mirrielees, 182 Mo. 126, 144.]

But defendant seeks to avoid the foregoing very just principle by denying its applicability. He contends that the case should be determined from the standpoint of election of remedies, and governed by the law applicable thereto. And that plaintiffs having voluntarily chosen the remedy of replevin, they can only recover snch damages as may be properly allowable in such an action. But it should be borne in mind that when plaintiffs made their election to sue in replevin, they did not-know of defendant’s conduct with Funk whereby the latter was put in position to do him the damage. An election of remedies refers to existing conditions when the election is made. And presupposes knowledge on the part of the elector. .[Johnson-Brinkman v. Railway, 126 Mo. 344, 351; Paquin v. Milliken, 163 Mo. 102.]

But it may he suggested that plaintiffs acquired knowledge of all their rights before the replevin action was prosecuted to judgment, and that they could then have dismissed their action and taken up some other remedy. We think to make such mode compulsory on a plaintiff in replevin would he unjust. They had found a part of their property under their writ. They were entitled to that in specie, if they desired it. It was their right to prosecute their case to judgment in order to *78save what property they found; and they should not be held to have forfeited their right to damages for the wrongs herein stated as having been done them by the defendant, merely because they insisted upon such right.

It follows that the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.

All concur.'