Harpending v. Meyer
Before: McKee, Mtrick, Sharpstein
Synopsis
Conversion—Bailee—Action—Statute oe LmrrATioNS.—Where the possession of property is obtained, (in good faith or otherwise) from one who had no right to transfer it, a right of action by the owner against the transferee accrues as soon as the latter acquires possession, and no demand or further act of conversion is necessary. Accordingly, in an action against defendants, who had, in good faith, and without notice of the plaintiffs rights, received in pledge the plaintiffs goods from her bailee, and afterward sold them, held, that the Statute of Limitations commenced to run from the time of the defendant acquiring possession, and not from the time of the subsequent sale by them.
Opinion — Sharpstein
Sharpstein, J.: By the findings of fact, which are conceded to be correct, it appears that on the 5th day of April, 1873, the plaintiff deposited with one Baux of San Francisco, certain jewelry. In about one month thereafter, the plaintiff, being about to leave San Francisco and to go to St. Louis, demanded her jewelry of said Baux, and he pretending that his father had the key to the safe induced her to leave without her jewelry, promising to forward it by express to her at St. Louis, so that it would reach there nearly as soon as she would. In fact, however, he had then pawned and delivered a part of said jewelry to the defendants, who were pawnbrokers, and on the 17th day of M:ty, 1873, he pawned and delivered a part of the residue of said jewelry to them, and on the following 9th day of July he pawned and delivered the entire residue thereof to them. Baux did not redeem the pledge, and on the 6th day of June, 1874, defendants sold it in the manner provided by law. On the 24th of July, 1876, plaintiff demanded said jewelry of the defendants, or its value, and said demand not being complied with she commenced this action. She alleges, among other things, that the defendants on the 6th day of June, 1874, unlawfully converted and disposed of said jewelry, and then alleges that on the 24th day of July, 1876, she demanded it as above stated. The judgment demanded is for the possession of the property, or if that cannot be had, for the value of it. v
■ One of the allegations of the answer is, that the cause of action did not arise or accrue within three years before the commencement of the action, and that it is barred by subdivision 3 of § 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The Court rendered judgment in favor of the defendant, and from that judgment the ' plaintiff appeals to this Court.
[558]The sole question which we have to consider is, whether the action was commenced within three years after the right of action accrued. All the cases agree in this, that a right of action accrues in favor of the owner of goods as soon as they aa-e wrongfully taken from his possession, or wrongfully converted by one who rightfully came into possession of them.' '"No right of action accrued against the defendants in this case until they took the plaintiff’s property without her assent. And, according to the New York cases and decisions in some of the other States, no .right of action, in the absence of a demand, accrued until they sold it. So far as we' are advised, neither that or the opposite doctrine has ever been expressly adopted in this State. Wc are, therefore, at liberty to adopt the doctrine which we think to be the more reasonable.
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