Annie Buckingham, Respondent, v. Charles W. Vincent and George B. Wheeler, as Executors, etc., of George T. Ross, Deceased, Appellants.
Conversion — when the master is hound hy the acts of his servants acting under the direction of a third person—when a demand for goods taken is unnecessary.
A master who has furnished to a third person a team, and servants to be used in the removal of certain goods, is liable for the act of his servants in removing to his own house by direction of such third person a piano claimed by the latter’s wife, who forbade them to move it, telling them that if they did so they would have to pay for it; and when he has retained possession of the piano until his decease, the wife may maintain an action against his executors for its conversion, without proving that she has demanded and been refused its possession by the deceased. /
Appeal by the defendants, Charles W. Vincent and another, as executors, etc., of George T. Boss, deceased, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Dutchess on the 28th day of June, 1897, upon the verdict of a jury, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 6th day of July, 1897, denying the defendants’ motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
Frank B. Lown, for the appellants.
Walter Farrington, for the respondent.
[MAJORITY — Cullen, J.:]
Cullen, J.:
This action was brought for the conversion of a piano. The only question raised on this appeal which it is necessary to discuss is the sufficiency'of the proof of conversion by the defendants’ testator. Though the evidence is meagre it would seem to establish, or at least permit the inference, that the defendants’ testator furnished his team and servants to the plaintiff’s husband under general instructions to remove the latter’s goods. The plaintiff’s husband directed the man in charge of the team to remove the piano in suit. The plaintiff "forbade its removal, and told the servants of defendants’ testator that if they moved the piano they would have to pay for it. This warning by the plaintiff not to remove the piano is substantially conceded in the defendants’ evidence. Notwithstanding this protest, the men removed the piano to the house of the defendants’ testator, where it has ever since remained. No proof was given tending to show a subsequent demand by the plaintiff on the defendants’ testator for the return of the piano, though it appeared that the plaintiff called on him at his house.- This may he explained by the fact that the decease of tlie defendants’ testator precluded the plaintiff from testifying to any personal transaction with him. The appellants’ counsel insists that the property came into the possession of defendants’ testator lawfully, and that until demand for its possession and refusal, no conversion took place.
There can be no question that the action of the defendants’ testator’s servants who had charge of the team was tortious in its inception. They were notified of the plaintiff’s claim to the property and forbidden to remove it. The only question there can be is whether the defendants’ testator was liable for the tortious act of the servants. ■ It is not enough to relieve the master from responsibility.for the acts of his servants that such acts are wrongful, or even in violation of his express instructions. If the acts are committed within the scope of the employment of the servant, and in the discharge of his duties to the master, the master is liable. Here.the instruction of the master to the servants and the particular services which the servants were called upon to perform were to remove and transport such goods as might be pointed out to them • for that purpose by the plaintiff’s husband. The acts done by the servants were not for any purpose of their own, nor are the men in chai’ge of the team to be considered in this respect the servants of the plaintiff’s husband alone so as to exclude the responsibility of the defendants’ testator. The former had no general control over them. The taking by the defendants’ testator’s servants must, therefore,: be considered in law as the act of their master; and the original possession of defendant’s testator being thus tortious, no demand and refusal were necessary. The conversion was complete at the time the goods were removed.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. '
All concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.