White Blakeslee Manufacturing Co. v. Rhodes, 152 N.C. 636 (1910)

May 25, 1910 · Supreme Court of North Carolina
152 N.C. 636

WHITE BLAKESLEE MANUFACTURING COMPANY v. E. J. RHODES.

(Filed 25 May, 1910.)

Claim and Delivery — Prosecution Bond — Plaintiff’s Default — Inquiry —Assessment of Damages — Judgment—Procedure.

Tlie plaintiff in claim and delivery proceedings, having filed his complaint, given the bond, and obtained the property sought therein, and having failed to appear at the trial and prosecute his action, judgment of nonsuit was entered, and the jury having ascertained on issue submitted the amount of damages defendant had sustained by reason of the seizure and detention of the property: Held, no error in the judgment of the lower court, in effect, t,hat the property seized under claim and delivery be returned to defendant, and if this could not be done, that defendant recover of plaintiff and his surety the penal sum of the bond, to be discharged upon payment of the damages assessed by the jury, with order that execution issue to enforce the judgment. Plvipps v. Wilson, 125 N. C., 106, cited and distinguished.

Appeal by plaintiff from Joseph S. Adams, J., at September Term, 1909, of Buncombe.

Tbe facts are sufficiently stated in tbe opinion of tbe Court.

S. G. Bernard for plaintiff.

Franlc Carter and George A. Shuford for defendant.

Walker, J.

Tbis action was brought by tbe 'plaintiff for tbe recovery of certain machinery described in tbe complaint. Tbe plaintiff caused to be instituted proceedings in claim and delivery, and gave an undertaking witb tbe usual condition in tbe sum of $1,000 for tbe prosecution of tbe action by tbe plaintiff, in tbe Superior Court of said county, against tbe defendant, for wrongfully seizing and detaining the said property, and for tbe return of tbe property to tbe defendant or for the payment of damages for tbe detention and deterioration of tbe property, if return thereof cannot be bad, in case tbe plaintiff should fail to prosecute tbe action without success.

It is stated in the case that tbe plaintiff filed a complaint, but failed to appear and prosecute tbe action when tbe same *637was called for trial, and judgment of nonsuit was thereupon entered against the plaintiff after be bad been called and failed to answer. Tbe court thereupon submitted an issue to the jury as to the damages the defendant had sustained by reason of the seizure and detention of the property, and the jury assessed the damages at $590, with interest from 5 April, 1905. The court further adjudged that the property seized by the sheriff and delivered to the plaintiff be returned to the defendant, and if upon execution issued it cannot be seized thereunder and returned as required by the order of the court, that the defendant recover of the plaintiff and its surety, the American Bonding Company, the sum of $1,000, which was the penalty of the plaintiff’s bond, to be discharged upon the payment of the sum of $590, with interest thereon, that being the amount of damages assessed by the jury. The court further ordered execution to issue for the enforcement of its judgment. The American Bonding Company alone appealed from the judgment of the court. A motion was made in this Court to dismiss the appeal, as the Bonding Company was not a party to the suit and, under the facts and circumstances as they appear in the record, had no right to appeal from the judgment of the court. No question was raised as to the costs which were adjudged to be paid by the plaintiff and its surety.

Manix v. Howard, 82 N. C., 125, settles the question presented in the case against the contention of the appellant, and it is only necessary for us to refer to what is therein said by Justice Dillard for the Court, which is as follows: “It is settled that whenever a party is deprived of the possession of property by the process of the law in proceedings adjudged void, an order for restitution will be made as a part of the judgment. Perry v. Tupper, 70 N. C., 538; Dulin v. Howard, 66 N. C., 433. Upon the same reason, if a plaintiff, in the action of claim and delivery, in which action both parties are actors, procured property to be taken out of the hands of the defendant and put into his possession, and then dismiss his action, it ought to be a part of the judgment to put the parties in statu quo. Such a course of proceeding seems to be necessary; otherwise, the plaintiff, under color of legal process, will perpetrate a fraud .on the law and be allowed to keep property the title to which was prima facie in the defendant, from whom it was taken at the beginning of the suit. In all cases where issue is joined on pleadings filed, the defendant on the trial may have a verdict on the right, and fixing the value; or, if plaintiff neglect or refuse to come to trial of the issue joined, the defendant may have judgment as of nonsuit for the property, with an assessment of value on a writ of inquiry, followed *638by a judgment in either case in the alternative: that is to say, for the property, if to be bad, and if not, then for the value. And it is equally necessary in all cases, whether issue be joined or not, in prevention of fraud, to provide, on plaintiff’s motion to dismiss or discontinue, for a like judgment in the alternative.”

The case of Phipps v. Wilson, 125 N. C., 106, upon which the appellant relied in this Court, presented a very different state of facts from those we find in the record now before us. In that case the court rendered judgment upon a counterclaim pleaded by the defendant, without any inquiry into the lawfulness of the seizure by the plaintiff of the defendant’s property. The pleadings or proceedings in that case, as will appear by reference thereto, presented this issue, and the Court decided that it should have been determined in favor of the defendant before he was entitled to a judgment upon his counterclaim. That is not our case, for here the plaintiff has failed to comply with the express condition of its bond, and failed to appear and prosecute its action as it was required to do. The defendant did not ask for any judgment on the counterclaim he had pleaded in the case, but merely for judgment according to the condition of the plaintiff’s bond, that is, for a return of the property unlawfully seized by the plaintiff, and in case such return could not be had under the process of the court, then the recovery of the damages assessed by the jury. In any view of the case, there was no error in the judgment of the- court below, even if the Bonding Company had the right to appeal therefrom.

No error.