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Law of Tort Page |
| INTERFERENCE WITH GOODS |
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INTRODUCTION Lecture notes here are from Street on Torts, Tenth Edition 1999. The action for trespass to goods, trespass de bonis asportatis, affords a remedy where there has been a direct interference with goods in the claimant's possession at the time of the trespass, whether that be by taking the goods from him or damaging the goods without removing them. The oldest of the chattel torts, the writ of detinue, developed to provide a remedy for wrongful detention of goods. Detinue is abolished by the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977. The one clear instance of detinue (loss or destruction of goods in breach of duty by a bailee) which did not constitute conversion at common law is ' converted' into a statutory conversion by s2(2) of that Act. The action for conversion (originally called trover) developed upon a legal fiction. The original form of the pleadings alleged that the defendant had found the claimant's chattels (hence the name 'trover') and had wrongfully converted them to his own use. The allegation of finding (trover) could not be contested and the essence of the tort became the wrongful conversion of the goods to the use of the defendant. But merely moving or damaging goods without converting them to the defendant's own use remains remediable in trespass alone. Trespass and conversion deal with intentional interference with goods. Where goods are lost or damaged as a result of the defendant's breach of a duty of care, an action may lie in negligence. The Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977 introduces a collective
description ' wrongful interference with goods' to cover conversion, trespass to
goods, negligence resulting in damage to goods or to an interest in goods and
any other tort in so far as it results in damage to goods or an interest in
goods. This is done to facilitate common treatment of all chattle torts in
respect to remedies and procedure. The Act neither redefines nor replaces the
existing substantive rules on trespass, conversion, or the residual chattle
torts. The substantive impact of the Act is extremely limited. Detinue is
abolished and the one clear instance of detinue which did not constitute
conversion at, common law (wrongful loss or destruction of goods by a bailee) is
declared to be conversion by s2(2). New provision is made for bailees to dispose
of uncollected goods. The main impact of the 1977 Act is, as we shall see, to
simplify and rationalise the remedies and procedures relating to chattle torts. 1. CONVERSION Conversion may be defined as an intentional dealing with goods which is seriously inconsistent with the possession or right to immediate possession of another person. This tort protects the claimant's interest in the dominion and control of his goods; it does not protect his interest in its physical condition. (A) INTEREST OF THE CLAIMANT The claimant must have either possession or the right to immediate possession. For example if a landlord has rented out furnished accommodation for a fixed term and a third party commits an act of conversion in respect of some of the furniture, the landlord has no right to sue in conversion, although the tenant may.
(B) THE SUBJECT MATTER Any goods can be the subject matter of conversion. These rules are unaffected by the 1977 Act which provides that unless the
context otherwise requires 'goods' includes all goods personal other than things
in action and money (s14(1)). The Act thus retains the common law rule that
money as currency (though not as coins, eg money in a bag: Taylor v Plumer
(1815) 3 M&S 562) does not fall within the ambit of conversion. (C) HUMAN BODY PARTS Advances in medical science pose some fascinating conundrums concerning
property rights in human body products. It is well established that there is no
property in a dead body: Dobson v North Tyneside Health Authority [1996] 4 All
ER 474. Only where some significant process has been undertaken to alter that
body, or preserve it for scientific or exhibition purposes, can any title to the
body be claimed. (D) STATE OF MIND OF THE DEFENDANT Save for the statutory conversion created by s2(2) of the 1977 Act there can only be a conversion if there is intentional conduct resulting in an interference with the goods of the claimant. If the defendant intends that dealing with the goods which, in fact, interferes with the control of the claimant, that act will be conversion: "though the doer may not know of or intend to challenge the property or possession of the true owner." (per Lord Porter, Caxton Publishing v Sutherland Publishing [1938] 4 All ER 389, 404). Mistake and good faith are irrelevant: "the liability … is founded
upon what has been regarded as a salutary rule for the protection of property,
namely that persons deal with the property in chattels or exercise acts of
ownership over them at their peril" (per Cleasby B, Fowler v Hollins (1872)
LR 7 QB 616, 639; aff'd (1875) LR 7 HL 757; followed in Union Transport Finance
v British Car Auctions [1978] 2 All ER 385). (E) ACTS OF CONVERSION In the some of the acts of conversion now to be enumerated, especially those involving the sale of the goods, it is unchallengeably clear that the act is sufficiently inconsistent with the rights of the true owner to be a conversion. In many of the other ways of committing conversion, the courts have a discretion whether they will treat the act as sufficiently inconsistent with the right of the true owner to be a conversion - this is especially true in the case of physical damage to the goods and breach of bailment.
(F) CONVERSION AS BETWEEN CO-OWNERS Co-ownership does not afford a defence to certain proceedings in conversion. Section 10(1)(a) of the 1977 Act provides that co-ownership is no defence to an action founded on conversion where the defendant, without the authority of the other co-owner, destroys the goods, or dispose of them in a way giving a good title to the entire property in the goods, or otherwise does anything equivalent to the destruction of the other interest in the goods. This principle was well established at common law, and s10(1)(a) is declared to be by way of restatement of existing law (s10(3)). The 1977 Act, however, does alter the common law by further providing in
s10(1)(b) that it is also no defence to an action founded on conversion where
the defendant, without the authority of the other co-owner, purports to dispose
of the goods in such a way as would give a good title to the entire property in
the goods if he were acting with the authority of all co-owners of the goods. At
common law, a sale and delivery by a co-owner which did not pass title was not a
conversion because it was not akin to destruction of the claimant's property. (G) REMEDIES: DAMAGES The major effect of the 1977 Act is to rationalise the remedies available to claimants suing in conversion both in relation to the damages which may be awarded and in making provision for specific return of the goods by way of orders for delivery. (1) At common law a claimant with a limited interest in the goods could normally recover their full value from a third party. Under s8 of the 1977 Act and rules of court the claimant now has to identify any other person whom he knows to have an interest in the goods and any such interested party may be joined, whereupon the damages may be apportioned amongst the interested parties in proportion to their respective interests. (2) The claimant in conversion is entitled to be compensated to the extent of the value to him of the goods of which he has been deprived. This will often appropriately be the market value of the goods. Where goods are of a kind which can be readily bought in the market the actual market value will be the appropriate measure; otherwise the replacement value in a comparable state (JE Hall v Barclay [1937] 3 All ER 620) or the original cost minus depreciation will be the standard. Where the actual value of the claimant's interest in the goods is less than the market value he may be awarded the value of that interest and not the higher market value. (3) 'The general rule is that a plaintiff whose property is irreversibly converted has vested in him a right to damages for conversion measured by the value of the property at the date of conversion' (BBMB Finance v Eda Holdings [1991] 2 All ER 129). However, the market value (even where ascertainable) at conversion will not necessarily mark the top limit of damages recoverable in conversion in the following instances:
(H) REMEDIES: OTHER FORMS OF RELIEF The 1977 Act introduces common remedies for all forms of 'wrongful interferences with goods'. Section 3 provides that in proceedings for conversion, or any other chattel tort, against a person in possession or control of goods, the following relief may be given, as far as is appropriate:
If it is shown to the court's satisfaction that an order for delivery and payment of any consequential damages has not been complied with, the court may revoke the order (or the relevant part of it) and make an order for payment of damages by reference to the value of the goods (s3(4)(a) and (b)). Where an order is made for delivery but giving the defendant the alternative of paying damages (ie, under s3(2)(b)), the defendant may satisfy the order by returning the goods at any time before execution of judgment, but without prejudice to liability to pay any consequential damages: s3(5). Where goods are not detained (as where they are lost or destroyed) the normal
form of judgment is for damages. (I) LIMITATION OF ACTIONS The Limitation Act 1980 provides that:
The Limitation Act 1980 also has complex provisions designed to enable owners from whom goods are stolen to sue the thief without limit of time.
An intentional or negligent interference with goods in the possession of the claimant is a trespass provided that the interference is direct. This tort protects several interests. First, it protects the claimant's
interest in the retention of possession of his goods (though the tort of
conversion also protects this interest and is more often relied on for this
purpose than is trespass). Secondly, trespass protects his interest in the
physical condition of his goods and, thirdly, his interest in the inviolability
of his goods, ie protection against intermeddling. (A) FORMS OF TRESPASS It follows that trespass to goods assumes various forms. Taking goods out of
the possession of another, moving them from one place to another, or even
bringing one's person into contact with them, or directing a missile at them
have all been held to be trespass. (B) CHARACTER OF THE ACT OF THE DEFENDANT There cannot be a trespass if the interference is indirect. In order to decide whether a mere touching of goods is a trespass one must ask whether trespass to goods is actionable per se:
(C) STATE OF MIND OF THE DEFENDANT In National Coal Board v JE Evans [1951] 2 All ER 310, the Court of Appeal
held that a contractor whose servant, while excavating, damaged the cable of the
plaintiff and whose act was neither intentional nor negligent, was not liable in
trespass to goods. There is, then, no liability for an accidental trespass to
goods. (D) THE INTEREST OF THE CLAIMANT The claimant must be in possession of the goods at the time of the interference. Possession connotes both the power (factum) of exercising physical control and the intention (animus) to exercise such control on his own behalf. Whether the claimant is owner is immaterial. Lord Esher has said: 'The plaintiff in an action of trespass must at the time of the trespass have the present possession of the goods, either actual or constructive, or a legal right to the immediate possession' (Johnson v Diprose [1893] 1 QB 512, 515). There are three apparent exceptions to the rule that possession is essential:
'Trespass to goods' is expressly included within the definition of a
'wrongful interference with goods' in the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act
1977. Therefore the defence of jus tertii is no longer available, and the
statutory rules regarding co-ownership also apply, as in an appropriate case are
all forms of relief provided for by that Act. (E) DAMAGES (1) MEASURE Where the claimant has been deprived of the goods, he is entitled to their value by way of damages. A claimant may recover general damages for loss of use of goods (as distinct from special damages for loss of profits from the goods) although he would not have been using them during the period within which he has been deprived of their use (The Mediana [1900] AC 113, 117-8 per Earl of Halsbury LC). The provisions of the 1977 Act relating to damages apply to actions for trespass to goods. (2) TRESPASS AB INITIO Where any person having by authority of law entered on land or seized goods, or arrested a person, subsequently commits a trespass his original act will in certain circumstances be deemed itself to be a trespass. The Distress for rent Act 1737, s19, abolished this rule in the case of distress for rent. This doctrine has little practical relevance today, but damages may be
assessed on the basis that the entire conduct of the defendant and not merely
his subsequent wrongful act is tortuous (Shorland v Govett (1826) 5 B&C 485,
obiter). 3. RESIDUAL TORTS There are many circumstances where the violation of interests in goods is not protected by trespass, conversion or even the tort of negligence. The action analogous to the old action on the case has proved very fruitful in filling these gaps; and what now follows is to be treated as illustrative of this wider right of action and not as exhaustively defining the circumstances in which it may be held available in the future. These torts are forms of 'wrongful interference with goods' so that, where relevant, the provisions of the 1977 Act apply. Trespass and conversion are especially restrictive in that they are not available to a claimant who neither possesses nor has an immediate right to possess the goods. The leading case of Mears v London and South Western Railway (1862) 11 CBNS 850, has firmly established that if goods are destroyed or damaged, the owner may sue without having possession or an immediate right to possess. The rule benefits, for example, a bailor, a purchaser where the vendor has a lien for unpaid purchase money, and a mortgagee. He must prove damage to his interest - taking the goods from the possessor without affecting title is insufficient. A bailee disregarding the terms of his bailment may sometimes be liable in
case, though not in conversion and that to deny the claimant access to his goods
or to interfere with his freedom of using them is also actionable on the case.
Further, to place baited traps on one's land near the highway so as to attract
dogs into the traps, and in consequence of which dogs are so trapped, is a tort
of this category (Townsend v Wathen (1808) 9 East 277). |
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