Wald v. Auto Salvage & Exchange Co.

Preston, J.

1. Replevin: identification of propeity. — 1. Plaintiff’s car was stolen upon tbe streets of Des Moines, March 15’ 1918. Plaintiff lives in Story County. He claims to have found tbe car on March 29th, in possession of tbe defendant, at its place of business in . . » Des Momes, and that it was m possession of the defendant on April 1, 1918, when tbe action was commenced. Defendant, at tbe close of all tbe testimony, moved for a directed verdict, which motion was overruled. Tbe main point relied upon by appellant for reversal is that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain tbe finding of tbe jury. Tbe contention is that tbe identification of tbe car was not sufficient. We shall not go into tbe details of tbe evidence. Defendant contends that tbe ear in its possession, which plaintiff claims as bis, bad been purchased and resold a time *13or two by it, and it seeks to trace the car by number, by tbe parties from whom it purchased and to whom it sold. On these different transfers there was no registration. Plaintiff does not seek to identify his ear by the numbers alone, but does so by marks, scratches, and so on. He claims and testifies that the numbers on the engine and machinery had been ground off, and some of the figures in the number changed in a crude manner, by a chisel or some such instrument. If his claim is true, that the numbers are ground off and others substituted, it would, of course, be difficult for him to identify by number. We see no reason why it is not competent to identify by other means, under such circumstances, if such .identification is sufficient to go to the jury, and convince the jurors. Plaintiff seems to have satisfied the jury that the ear claimed was his, and we think the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury on that point, and to sustain the finding.

Plaintiff reported the theft of his car at once to the police, and the next morning to the sheriff. He gave the numbers of his car, and gave a description of some of the marks by which to identify his car; In a few days, he was notified by the police that there was a stolen car at Kansas City that answered the description, and plaintiff went to Kansas City and identified the two rear wheels by rope marks and knife cuts. The rest of the ear was not his. Plaintiff returned on March 29th, and on the 29th, in the afternoon, he went to defendant’s secondhand place, thinking to buy another car — a runabout. In looking at the runabouts, he says he noticed one of the front doors of his car on a runabout. He identified the door by upholstery tacks he had driven in a certain way, shortly before his car was stolen. At this he became suspicious, and he looked at the other cars, and saw one that looked like his, except that the wheels had been changed. He says

“They just slipped my wheels off and put on different wheels, but the one wheel, — on the left front wheel, there was a little bulge in that, and there was a little bulge in mine; and that was the reason why, — well, I didn’t say anything then. Then I looked inside in the back seat, and there was my carpet, because I had my oil can tip over one day, and the oil poured out on the carpet, and I took the carpet up and I just scraped *14the oil up; and there I found the marks of my scraper, and the carpet with the oil spot on it, just the same; and I identified my rubber mat. We put a cut-out on, and when we cut out the hole for the cut-out plunger that you put your foot on, — we put a new cut-out on then,'— the knife slipped and run quite a ways dówn into the mat; and here was my mat, and I knew it just as plain as I know my child’s face, because it was made when I cut out the hole. There was my matting. Well, I commenced' to look around, and I knew that the back spring, I had made a mark on that. The blacksmith up there had made a coupling that we took off of what is called the rear spring. We put this coupler on, so we could haul a trailer, * * * that coupler made a mark on my rear spring. It was not a regular coupler, made by the factory, but by a blacksmith; and I took a lath hatchet, with these little kind of saw teeth on the end of it that they used to put lath on with; and in striking, — I struck a couple of times, — I struck the rear spring; and here was the mark of the hatchet; and here was the mark of that coupler, just as plain as the day I took it off. Well, then, I looked around, and I remembered we ripped the hood, and my wife sewed that hood up, and I went around to where she put the patch on the left side; so there was the hood sewed up just the way my wife sewed it up. It was just a couple of days before the car was stolen when the oil was there, and we broke the cap on the gasoline tank. I guess I was trying to turn it the wrong way, and I gave a tap and broke it, and we broke it in a funny way, and there was a little sharp point, and I know I touched that point, and it was sharp, and it kind o’ scratched my fingers. Well, sir, there was my broken cap. Well, then, I went into the back seat, and there was my curtains, rolled up and tied just as I had tied them, with a sash cord, — just as I had tied them myself, with the knots on it. We had been hunting walnuts, and I had several,— the reason why we had this sash cord, we went walnut hunting in the fall, and I had some sash cord that I used on a tent, and I took them off of the tent, and had them with us in the back seat. ’ ’

Many other circumstances are given, bearing upon the question of identification, some of which we shall refer to with less detail.

*15He says there was a new pair of chains in the car he was driving; some brass tacks he had driven, in place of screws which had worked out; a piece of his grip. He testifies that, after he had found all these marks, he knew it was his car, except the wheels; and that he then told defendant, or its employees, that it was his car, and that it was a stolen car; and that he asked them to help him find the thief; that they agreed to do this, but that the man who first showed him the car nearly fainted; that he had to sit down, and got as white as a sheet, when witness said that; that witness asked them to get into the car and go to the man he had bought of, and the other people who knew of the markings; and that he was then told that the defendant had bought the car last fall. Witness called their attention to the fact that there was a card on one of the wheels, which said, “Bought 3-22-18,” and he asked them how it came that they bought it last fall; and they said they bought it twice. He again asked them to go with him to different ones to identify the car. They finally told plaintiff that he had not sufficiently identified the car, and told him that he was trying to spoil a sale, and the sooner he would get out of the place, the better. Plaintiff then started for the sheriff’s office, but was excited, and not feeling well; so, on the way, telephoned the sheriff’s office, and waited until two deputies came. Thinks he was gone from defendant’s place about half an hour. The deputies and plaintiff went to defendant’s place, and plaintiff asked them where the car was, and they said they had sold it. Plaintiff expressed surprise to them that they should have sold the car after he had told them it was his, and a stolen car. Finally, one of them told plaintiff that the car he had looked at inside, was out in the alley. He claims they had switched doors on him; that the one in the alley was not his car, and not the one he had seen inside, though some of the things that were in the other car had been placed in this, and some of the things which he had before seen in his car were found in other ears. Plaintiff went home that evening, but came back on Saturday, the 30th, about noon, and he had the papers ready to serve the writ of replevin; but the courthouse was closed in the afternoon, and he had to let it go till Monday, when he and the sheriff went to serve the writ, and there was nothing in sight, as he puts it. He says that they *16didn’t even have that one in the alley; so he didn’t get a thing. At that time, there were dozens of cars in the alley, but the one with his things in was gone. That is the reason the writ was not served. The car was reasonably worth $425. There is much more of similar testimony. Plaintiff says he was sick, and a part of the time excited, and somewhat confused. At one point, he was perhaps confused as to one of the numbers. A deputy sheriff, who was also state agent, working on automobile thefts, testifies as to some of the marks of identification plaintiff had reported in the first instance; that he went to defendant’s place of business with plaintiff on the 29th, and that, when they looked for the car, it was not on the floor. He thinks they told him they had sold the car, at which plaintiff seemed dumbfounded; and finally they directed them out in the alley. The car in the alley had some resemblance, and, looking through the car, they found the curtains under the back seat, and the sash cord, etc.

Clearly, this evidence, standing alone, would justify a finding by the jury in plaintiff’s favor. Some of his evidence is not disputed. Much of it is. Some of the evidence tends to show that some of the minor parts were changed to other ears, and some of the things in the car, which plaintiff alleges to have been his, were put in other cars. The effect of this evidence would be to confuse, and to prevent, to some extent, identification. Defendant’s evidence, standing alone, would justify a verdict for the defendants. Since there was a conflict, the jury had the right to believe the plaintiff. Clearly, there was a conflict in the evidence. The jury has spoken, and we are relieved of the responsibility of passing upon the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony, and precluded from interfering with the verdict. ,

a. tbial: excessive verdiet. 2. It is thought that the verdict is the result of passion and prejudice, for that the verdict returned was for $450, or $25 more than the value of the ear, as shown by the evidence. The difference is not so glaring as to shock the conscience, and indicate passion or prejudice.

*173' Sato”VIie7ydoi writ: effect. *163. Appellant contends further that the court erred in holding, as a matter of law, that plaintiff could maintain replevin for the whole car, upon attempting to prove identity to *17only’ a few insignificant and inseparable parts, disclaiming other parts of the car. Appellant cites authority to the proposition that a single piece of property, in which there is a joint ownership, which is not capable of separation, and not susceptible of seizure and delivery to the plaintiff, is not subject to replevin. There is no trouble about this. Plaintiff was not asking to seize and recover inseparable parts. He was asking to recover the car as a ear, or its value. The identification of inseparable parts would tend to identify the whole car. It was still a car, even though the hind wheels and one of the doors had been removed, and replaced by others. Had the car remained in defendant’s possession, so that the writ of replevin could have been served, the question would have been as to the possession of the ear. Being unable to find the car, plaintiff asks judgment for its value. It became, in effect, an action in detinue, to recover the value of the ear. If there had been a conversion of the car by the defendants, or they had concealed it, or if they had sold it, as the evidence tends to show, after they had been informed by. plaintiff that it was a stolen ear, and plaintiff’s property, they would be liable to plaintiff for its value. Plaintiff elected to take a money judgment, and was entitled to recover the value, since the property could not be found, and with interest from the date when the suit to recover was commenced. Sheffield v. Hanna, 136 Iowa 579, 588.

4‘ teest^on* money judgment. Appellant contends that interest should have been allowed only from the date of the judgment, and cites Bonnot Co. v. Newman Bros., 109 Iowa 580, 585. In that case, plaintiff had not elected to take a judgment for money, in lieu of the property, and the value of the property at the time the suit was brought was not shown. Other circumstances in that case are different from the instant case. Under the circumstances there, the court held that interest should not have been allowed f*om the time of the commencement of the action. We think the instant case is governed by the Sheffield ease.

There may be one or two other minor points suggested, but *18those discussed are controlling. There is no prejudicial error, and the judgment is — Affirmed.

Weaver, C. J., Evans and Salinger, JJ., concur.