
    AMOS TAYLOR, APPELLANT, v. JEROME BREWER, RESPONDENT.
    Argued February 18, 1920
    Decided June 11, 1920.
    1. In an action of trespass de ionis asportatis, incidental damages representing personal loss, inconvenience and outlay are proper subjects for consideration by a jury.
    2. In an action of' trover and conversion the damages are limited to the value of the converted chattel and interest thereon from the date of the conversion. .
    On appeal from the Burlington County. Circuit Court.
    Before Gummere, Chibe Justice, and Justices Mihturn and Black.
    For the appellant, Palmer & Powell.
    
    For the respondent, James M. Davis.
    
   The opinion of the court was delivered "by

Minturn, J.

The plaintiff's Ford car was stolen by defendant at Mount Holly, on August 29th, 1918, and sold at Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, The plaintiff recovered it about September 23d, 1918, and brought this suit in trover and conversion for damages. There was no dispute regarding the facts, but the issue presented to the trial court was the guantwm of damages recoverable. The ear was second hand when plaintiff purchased it, and it cost him $300. The jury returned a verdict in his favor for $413.35. They doubtless arrived at that result by the application of the legal rule of damages laid down by the learned trial court, which was, in effect, that he was entitled to recover the depreciated value of the ear, plus its alleged depreciation, and the money 'expended by him in his effort to recover it,ras well as the reasonable value of the use of the car, during the period of'its absence. Tlie unique result, is, that the plaintiff has the car, plus a verdict for its value, and incidental losses to himself. This anomalous situation was manifestly produced by a misconception of the fundamental nature of the action of trover ana conversion. Since the submission of this case, we have determined the case of Ward v. Hoff, ante p. 81, involving pubstantially similar features as to damages^ as we find presented in the case a,t bar. We there elucidated the distinction between the damages recoverable at common law in an action of trover and conversion and in an action of trespass de bonis asporiaiis.

In the latter case it was, conceded that the incidental damages representing personal loss, inconvenience and outlay were proper subjects for consideration by a jury, in reaching a verdict, but in the former character of action, the damages are limited to the value of the converted chattel and interest thereon from the date of conversion.

The case at- bar presents the additional feature of the recovery and possession of the car by the plaintiff.

This situation requires under the rule thus laid down a mitigation of the damages, based upon an estimate of the value of the ear, at the time of the conversion, compared with the value of the car at the time of its recovery. The difference in value, plus interest, from the date of the conversion, will represent in this form of action the damages recoverable. Bigelow Co. v. Heintze, 53 N. J. L. 69; 38 Cyc. 2102, and cases cited; 26 R. C. L. 71, and cases cited; Colby v. Reed, 99 U. S. 560.

Cases in other jurisdictions dealing with the subject from the standpoint of a general recovery of damages peculiar concecledly to an action in trespass- de bonis asporiaiis, are presumably based upon the existence of a statute, or a practice, which in its conception overlooks the fundamental distinction between the two classes of actions, a distinction in fundamentals which has not been abolished by the new Practice act. Ward v. Hoff, supra.

The judgment will therefore be reversed.  