Crowley v. Wallace

12 Mo. 143
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 12 Mo. 143 (Crowley v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crowley v. Wallace, 12 Mo. 143 (Mo. 1848).

Opinion

Napton, judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of ejectment to recover a tract of land, described in the declaration as the se. qr. and e. hf. of ne. qr. of sec. 2, the se. qr. of sw. qr. of sec. 1 and the e. hf of ne. qr. of sec. 5, all in town. 40 R. 27. Th'e plaintiffs had a verdict and judgment. The title was as follows: 1st. An original summons issued by a justice of the peace, requiring William Crowley to appear before him on the 22d July 1844, in the matter of B. F. & T. B. W. vs. Crowley, on which was returned: <£ Summons served by reading the same to W. Crowley on the 13th Julv 1S44: M. Gragg constable.” 2d. A transcript of a judgment, filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court, of B. F. & T. B. Wallace Vs. Crowley. This transcript showed a judgment by default on 22d July 1844—execution August 5, 1844—renewed 15th October and returned 17th December 1844, no property found—and the transcript filed in clerk’s office Of circuit court February 3d 1845. 3d. An execution from the justice dated 7th July 1845 and returned nulla bona. 4th. An execution from the circuit court dated 22d Sept. 1845, the return of which shows a levy, on the 22d September 1845, upon the land described in the declaration—a sale on the 15th October 1845, to plaintiffs. 5th. A deed from the sheriff, for the same land, dated 20th April 1846. This deed was acknowledged at the April term 1846. The record of which describes the land as the deed does, excepting that the se. qr. of the sw. qr. is placed in section 5 instead of section 1, the words ££ of S. 1,” being omitted. It describes the land further as the same levied and sold under execution in the ease of Wallace vs. Crowley &c. The deed was filed 11th June 1846.

All theée documents were objected to and exceptions taken to their admission.

Oral testimony was given to show, that W. Crowley Sr. (one of the defendants) was in possession of the premises sued for. But the witness in describing the land, only spoke of the se. qr. of sw. of sec. 1 T. 40 R. 27, as part of the land in possession of the defendant.

Daniel Crowley, who was not an original defendant, had been admit-ed as such, at his instance.

The defendants read a deed from W. Crowley Sr. to Daniel Crowley, dated 8th March 1844, conveying the se. qr. and e. hf. of the ne. qr. of sec. 2 T. 40 R. 27, and the sw. qr. of sec. 1 T. 40 R. 27 and n. hf. of nw. qr. of sec. 1 T. 40 R. 27, recorded same day.

[146]*146The plaintiffs then introduced evidence to prove that this deed was fraudulent.

At the instance of the plaintiffs the court gave the following instructions.

1st. If the jury believe from the evidence, that the plaintiffs have shown a valid judgment and execution in their favor against William Crowley, and a sheriff’s deed, by virtue of said judgment and execution to the land in controversy, and that said defendants were in possession of the land at the commencement of this suit, and that the deed from W. to D. Crowley was made for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding creditors, they must find for the plaintiffs.

2d. If the deed from W. to D. Crowley was made for the purpose of preventing the creditors of said William from levying upon and selling the said land, the deed is void, provided the said William had not sufficient other property upon which to levy.

The other instructions given on the same side are mere repetitions of these.

Instructions were also given on the part of the defendants, in most particulars, the same already stated with this additional one, that the plaintiffs could only recover so much land as the defendants were proved to be in posssession of.

The verdict was that the defendants detained the lands specified in the declaration, the usual motion to set aside the verdict was made, and a bill of exceptions filed.

There seem to be no questions presented by this record, except such as relate to the various documents offered in evidence to make out the plaintiffs title. The question of fraud was submitted to the jury upon evidence and instructions, neither of which were objected to at the trial.

The title of the plaintiffs was derived from a purchase at a sheriff’s sale. This sale was made under an execution issued upon a transcript of a judgment obtained before a justice of the peace. Both the transcript and the execution were in evidence, and the plaintiff, in order to show authority on the part of the clerk to issue the execution, gave in evidence a copy of an execution issued by the justice with the return of nulla bona thereon, certified by the justice who issued it. The plaintiffs, for the purpose, it is presumed, of showing jurisdiction in the justice over the person of the defendant, W. Crowley, also produced the original summons with the return of the constable thereon. The admissibility of this summons, with the return, presents the first question we will consider.

[147]*147The objection taken to the summons is, that it does not appear from the return, that the writ was served in the township. The question is not whether the return would be quashed for insufficiency, but whether the failure of the officer to specify in his return, that the writ was served in the township, shall vitiate all the proceedings so that they may be pronounced void in a collateral suit.

The form of the return is not prescribed by statute, yet the return should regularly show that the writ was executed within the officer’s jurisdiction. Had the return showed that the writ was served in a place without the jurisdiction of the officer, the proceedings based upon it would be void. But inasmuch as the return is silent on the subject, the presumption must be, when attacked in this collateral way, that the writ was served in the township. Wilson vs. Jackson adm. 10 Mo. R. 329 ; Saunders vs. Rains, Ib. 770; Perryman vs. Relfe, 8 Ib. 208.

The plaintiffs further attempted to show that previous to the issuing of the execution from the circuit court, an execution had been issued by the justice, directed to the constable of the township in which the defendant resided, and was returned. “ That the defendant had no goods or chatties whereof to levy the same.” This was done by the transcript, from which it appeared that an execution issued August 5, 1844, that it was renewed 18th October, 1844, and returned 17th Dec., 1844. No property found.” The plaintiff, however, gave in evidence a certificate copy of an execution issued by the justice on the 7th July, 1845, and returned no property found.” The objection to this is, that the original was not produced. The evidence was superfluous, because the transcript showed that one execution had already issued and returned nulla bona, which was sufficient to authorize the execution from the clerk’s office of the circuit court.

The objections to the sheriff’s deed are two-fold. First, that it was executed on the 20th April, 1846, and the declaration was filed on the 9th March, previous, in which it is averred that the plaintiffs title accrued on the 20th October, 1845; and secondly, that the acknowledgment is insufficient.

The case of Buxton vs. Carter, (11 Mo. R.) is cited in support of the first branch of this objection, and the case would certainly be decisive against the plaintiffs were it not for the intervention of another principle.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mo. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowley-v-wallace-mo-1848.