Instruction to Jury Regarding Goods Wrongfully Taken From Plaintiff as Conversion 2025

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A conversion occurs when a person without authority or permission intentionally takes the personal property of another or deprives another of possession of personal property. It is a tort which allows the injured party to seek legal relief. This article shall discuss the basic law involving conversion.
The Ohio Jury Instructions (OJI) are written by a committee of the Ohio Judicial Conference. The Law Library has the OJI in its Westlaw database as well as in print. You can buy Ohio Jury Instructions in print or electronically from LexisNexis.
Specifically, you would have to prove the following three elements to make a successful conversion claim in California: you had ownership or right to possession of the property, the defendant wrongfully took your property or interfered with your ability to use it; and. you suffered damages as a result.
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People also ask

Criminal Conversion: A person who knowingly or intentionally exerts unauthorized control over the property of another person commits criminal conversion.
Conversion is strictly related to negligent behavior. Normally, when one person has little-to-no regard for someone elses property. Like, if someone steals your cell phone and then sells it online Sometimes, however, conversion can be accidental.
To be conversion, a taking of property must be without the owners consent. There must be some act giving the taker some control over the object, though actual physical removal is not essential. The taking need not be malicious or even knowledgeable.
Conversion is an intentional tort. The intent that must be proven is the intent to exercise dominion and control over the plaintiffs property in a manner inconsistent with the plaintiffs rights. However, intent or purpose to do a wrong is not necessary to establish conversion, merely intent to seize the property.
Conversion is an intentional tort which occurs when a party takes the chattel property of another with the intent to deprive them of it. Conversion is not applicable to real property. For the purposes of conversion, intent merely means the objective to possess the property or exert property rights over it.

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