Wrongful Conversion Flashcards
Wrongful conversion
General rule
True owner does not lose title when property is stolen
Who can the owner go after in a wrongful conversion?
Can go after BFP for what and why?
BFP: For return of item without compensation
• Rationale: somebody must lose and courts usually favor original victim over innocent purchaser…
- 1) to induce buyers to investigate or act reasonably in purchases and
- 2) the innocent person who most easily could have prevented the problem or misunderstanding must suffer the loss
Who can the owner go after in a wrongful conversion?
Can go after the WC for what and why?
Wrongful Converter: True owner may elect to get either Repelvin and damages or Trover
- Replevin and perhaps damages
Replevin: item returned to owner’s possession
Damages: equal to the fair market value of the chattel at time of conversion; also may be used when the item is returned but damaged so additional monetary damages are req’d
or. ..
- 2. Trover: item not returned, suit for monetary damages. More likely when the item has reduced in value significantly
Based on fair market value measured at time of wrongful conversion
Bona Fide Purchaser may acquire good title in three situations:
- Goods obtained by fraud
- Money and negotionable instruments
- Entrustment/Ensuing Doctrine
Wongful Converters and Bona Fide Purchasers acquire only this type of interest and why
Acquire only simple possessory interest:
The right to continue possession against all except someone who has a better right to possession, i.e. true owner
Rationale: to maintain peaceable order in society
Can a wrongful converter convey title by selling the property to a bona fide purchaser?
What is the reasoning?
Wrongful converter (WC) cannot convey title by selling property to a bona fide (good faith) purchaser
- Rationale: no person can transfer better title than he has
- BFP (bona fide purchaser) = acted in good faith and without notice that wrongdoer did not have good title
What type of interest do the WC and BFP and why?
• WC and BFP do however acquire simple possessory interest – the right to continue possession against all except someone who has a better right to possession, i.e. true owner
• Rationale: to maintain peaceable order in society
• Voidable title doctrine
What does it do and why?
- This conveys voidable title in wrongdoer (true owner may rescind) but then if wrongdoer sells to BFP they receive good title and will prevail over original owner
- Rationale: the courts, faced with two innocent parties having to suffer a loss, law puts the loss at the feet of the true owner since she was the one who helped created the situation by transferring title to the wrongdoer
- True owner could still have recourse against wrongdoer if she can find him
• Money and negotiable instruments
- BFP prevails over original owner
- Rationale: commerce would be paralyzed if the recipient of money or other forms of payment bore the burden of investigating payer’s title
- Ex. thief steals cash, buys a mink coat, and sells it to GFP
• Entrustment / entrusting doctrine
What is it,
Why,
And what does it not cover?
• Where owner entrusts possession of goods to a merchant who deals in goods of that kind
- Entrusting = any delivery or acquiescence in retention of possession regardless of any conditions expressed between parties or if procurement would be considered theft
• If merchant sells stolen goods to BFP in the ordinary course of business
• BUT this exception does not cover pawn shops (UCC) because usually governed by special state statutes and regulations
• E.g. owner takes diamond necklace to a jeweler solely to have it appraised and jeweler then sells necklace to a customer who happened to see it in the shop
• Only remedy for owner is against the merchant for damages