Carroll v. Frank

38 Mo. App. 167, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 437
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 38 Mo. App. 167 (Carroll v. Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll v. Frank, 38 Mo. App. 167, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 437 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was before the court on a former appeal, and is reported in 28 Mo. App. 69. Re-stating the case in outline, it is as follows: An attachment suit was brought before a justice of the peace, by.Henry Lyon & Son, against Jacob Karatofsky, and the writ was levied upon one zinc trunk and the contents thereof. Thereafter, the defendant in this action, Joseph Frank, brought an action of replevin before another justice of the peace, in which action he obtained the custody of the trunk and its contents from the constable. Thereafter the justice dismissed the action for want of jurisdiction, leaving Mr. Frank in custody of the trunk and. contents. The constable brings this action against Mr. Frank for the value of the same, on the theory of a conversion. The substantial defense is, that the trunk and contents are the property of the defendant. The case was again tried before the court sitting as a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for substantial damages. The defendant now appeals to this court.

It will be remembered that, on the former trial, the plaintiff also had a judgment, but for nominal damages [170]*170only, and that the appeal was prosecuted by the plaintiff. We reversed that judgment in an opinion in which the following language was used: “If the defendant was really the owner of the chattels, it is a complete defense to this action for him to prove his ownership ; for the constable could not acquire, as against the owner, any special property in the goods of a stranger to the attachment suit, from the mere fact of levying upon them.” We also held that the court, on the former trial, erred in allowing the principal witness for the defendant, Jacob Karatofsky, to testify, against the objection of the plaintiff, to certain unsworn declarations of his son, Isaac Karatofsky, made to the witness whilst Isaac Karatofsky was in possession of the trunk and its contents, to the effect that he, Isaac, had got them from the defendant’s store at Ft. Smith, Arkansas. On the trial, from which this appeal is prosecuted, a new deposition of Jacob Karatofsky was put in evidence by the defendant, which contained, in like manner, the declarations of his son respecting his title to the goods, which declarations were excluded.

This deposition of Jacob Karatofsky was the only evidence upon which the defendant rested his claim to the ownership of the goods. It was substantially to the effect that the deponent, Jacob Karatofsky, had been carrying on business as a merchant at Ft. Smith, Arkansas; that, in January, 1883, he had made an assignment to Nathan Frank for the benefit of his creditors ; that Nathan Frank had sold the assigned goods at public auction, and that the defendant, Joseph Frank, had become the purchaser thereof ; that Joseph Frank continued to carry on, at Ft. Smith, the business which the witness had carried on prior to the assignment; that Isaac Karatofsky, a son of the deponent, had been employed by Joseph Frank as a clerk or salesman in this store at Ft. Smith ; that, in July of the same year, Isaac Karatofsky was discharged by Joseph [171]*171Frank, and made Ms appearance in St. Loms, where the witness, his father, was then lodging, having in his custody the zinc trunk and contents, which are the subject of this action; that the witness opened the trunk and recognized the goods therein as being the goods of the defendant, Joseph Frank; that he knew them to be such from the fact, that they still had the marks on them which he, the witness, had put on them while they were his goods. The witness swore in the most positive manner that the goods were the goods of the defendant, and that they had been stolen from the defendant by his son. The testimony disclosed also the fact that he and his son had quarreled and were at enmity; in short, he accused his son of stealing from other people as well as from the defendant, and called him a robber.

The accuracy of the statements of this witness, as to the identity of the goods-as the goods of the defendant, was somewhat impaired by his cross-examination, and by the testimony of a witness named Steele, who was baggage master at the Union depot in St. Louis when the trunk and its contents were attached by Henry Lyon & Son, as the property of this witness, Jacob Karatofsky, which testimony was to the effect that Jacob Karatofsky used expressions, indicating a claim of ownership ■of the goods himself. Mr. Steele testified: “ He was very angry, and said that Ms property could not be attached in that manner; he would show them that they could not attach Ms property.” On the other hand, the accuracy of Mr. Steele’s recollection was somewhat impaired 'by his cross-examination, leaving it in doubt, whether Jacob Karatofsky did not object to the attachment on the ground, that the goods had already been delivered to the railway company for transportation, and a oheck issued for the same.

I. We have thus stated the substance of the testimony the better to dispose of the principal assignments of error, [172]*172which is, that the finding of the circuit court against the title of the defendant, Joseph Prank, is contrary to the evidence. We do not think that this assignment of error can be supported. It is to be remembered, that the plaintiff, who was the constable who levied the attachment of. Henry Lyon & Son upon the trunk and contents, as the property of Jacob Karatofsky, made out a prima facie case in support of his right of possession as having a special property in the trunk and contents, when he put in evidence the record in the attachment suit. The defendant, Joseph Prank, not having prosecuted his replevin suit to effect, but it having been dismissed by the justice for want of jurisdiction, stood in the position of a person who had taken the goods from a-constable, and who was bound to justify his taking by proof of his ownership. The burden of proving ownership being thus upon him, the stress of this assignment of error is, that the circuit court did not believe the evidence adduced by him in support of his title. In order to support an assignment of error, on the ground that the trier of the facts, in an action at law, has refused to credit the evidence.adduced by the party sustaining the burden of evidence, the case must come within the rule stated by this court in Lionberger v. Pohlman, 16 Mo. App. 392, 398, that, “Where the testimony offered in support of the allegations of the party who sustains the burden of the proof is, if believed, sufficient to make out his case, and is clear, consistent with itself, delivered by an unimpeached witness, and no circumstance is developed tending to cast suspicion upon it, and no substantial countervailing evidence is offered by the other party, if the jury, nevertheless, disregard it and return a verdict against it, it will be the duty of the trial court on a motion for a new trial, and of an appellate court on appeal or error, to set it aside as being the result of a manifest mistake.” It is clear that this case is not within the rule thus stated, because the claim of [173]*173title of the defendant rests entirely upon the deposition of Jacob Karatofsky, and there is, to say the least, some countervailing evidence, namely, the testimony of the witness, Steele, to the effect that, at the time of the levy of the attachment of Henry Lyon & Son, Jacob Karatofsky claimed the goods as his own. But it is argued that, as the testimony of Jacob Karatofsky consisted estirely of a deposition

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Related

Lionberger v. Pohlman
16 Mo. App. 392 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1885)
Carroll v. Frank
28 Mo. App. 69 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887)
Bevis v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
30 Mo. App. 564 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
38 Mo. App. 167, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-frank-moctapp-1889.