Dreyfus v. Mayer, Son & Co.

69 Miss. 282
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 69 Miss. 282 (Dreyfus v. Mayer, Son & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dreyfus v. Mayer, Son & Co., 69 Miss. 282 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was tried in the court below by the judge, a jury being waived, and on an agreed state of facts.

In September, 1890, J. L. Savage was engaged in the liquor business at Tunica, Miss., and on the-day of September oi’dered certain goods from the appellees, merchants at Cincinnati, Ohio, which goods were purchased on credit and shipped to him by appellees.. The goods reached Tunica on September 28. On the 26th of September, Savage, having [284]*284paid, the freight on the goods, which goods had not then arrived, sold to appellants, Dreyfus & Weil, “his entire stock of goods,” giving them a bill of sale, in which each article sold was specified, and concluding as follows: “All the above described property, being situated in my saloon, in the town of Tunica, county of Tunica, except the last four named articles, said articles being in the L., N. O. & T. Railroad depot in said town. The four last named articles on the bill of sale were “one half-barrel of peach brandy, one half-barrel of IT. W. McCullough whisky, one barrel of Indian Hill Bourbon, one ease Geneva gin.” On the arrival of the goods sold by appellees to Savage (September 28), Dreyfus & Weil took possession of them (but without removing them from the depot) and rebilled them to one Kernstein, at Clarksdale, Miss. On the 8th day of October, the goods, which were yet in the depot, were seized, under a writ of attachment issued at the suit of one White against Savage. Dreyfus & Weil interposed a claim to the same, and, upon executing a claimant’s bond, the officer delivered them the goods. On the 20th day of October the action between White and Savage was tried before the justice of the peace, and judgment rendered in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff immediately prayed'and was granted an appeal to the circuit court. After this had been done, Mayer, Son & Co. filed their claim to the goods seized, under the right of stoppage in transitu. No action was taken before the justice on this claim, and in sending up to the circuit court the papers on the appeal of White, the justice did not send the claim of appellees. The appellees, however, appeared before the circuit court, and there filed their claim again. After the claim of appellees had been filed in the circuit court, White, the attaching creditor, dismissed his suit; but the court, upon the application of appellees, and over the objection of appellants, directed an issue to be made up for the trial of the claim of appellants. Upon this issue judgment was rendered in favor of appellees, and from that judgment Dreyfus & Weil appeal.

[285]*285The principal question presented is, whether, on the agreed facts, Mayer, Son & Co. could exercise their right of stoppage in transitu. The case is argued,here by counsel for appellant upon the assumption that the. goods seized were sold by. Savage to Dreyfus .& Weil, and were described, or intended to be described, in the bill of sale executed by him to them. On the other hand, it is assumed by counsel for appellees that Savage did not sell or intend to sell these goods to Dreyfus & Weil, but that they, having bought a particular lot of goods, without right, claimed also to own the goods seized. This very material fact is left, by the agreed statement of facts, to stand only upon the face of the bill of sale. There is not one syllable in the facts agreed on going to show that the goods in controversy were intended to be covered by that clause in the bill of sale describing the “last four items” as then in the depot at Tunica. For-aught that appears in the agreed facts, there were other packages at the depot when the sale was made to which the bill of sale applied, and which were received by the purchasers. If, as matter of fact, the' goods in controversy were sold “ in good faith ” by Savage to Dreyfus & Weil, and afterwards qame to their possession before the levy of the writ of attachment, it would be difficult to perceive upon what theory the right of stoppage in transitu could be thereafter exercised.' Tinder such circumstances, the journey would be ended by the goods coming into the possession of the representatives of the purchaser, and, with the journey, the right of stoppage by the seller would also cease; but the appellants, so far as the agreed facts disclose, were not the purchasers of these goods, and, because they were not, did not stand as the representatives of the buyer, Savage. They were, therefore, mere interlopers, and their act in taking possession of the goods was wholly ineffectual, either in favor of themselves or of Savage, or as against the appellees. Unless, therefore, the right of the sellers to exercise the remedy by stoppage in transitu was affected by the levy of the attachment by White, or by what [286]*286occurred thereunder, it yet existed, and the judgment of the court was correct.

The contention of appellant that the right of stoppage in transitu can be exercised only where the property itself can be found, is not supported by either reason or authority.

It is well settled that the levy of an attachment does not affect the right. 5 Lawson, Rights & Rem., § 2495 ; Morris v. Shryock, 50 Miss., 590. And though the goods be converted into money by an order of the court, the seller may exercise the right, by resorting to the fund realized by the sale. O’Brien v. Norris, 16 Md., 122; Hause v. Judson, 4 Dana (Ky.), 7, 29 Am. Dec. and notes. So, also, if, upon sale of the goods the court directs the proceeds to be paid to one of the parties to the suit, upon his entering into bond for repayment of the money, the nature of the fund is not thereby changed and the right of stoppage in transitu is not lost. Hall & Loney v. Richardson, 16 Md., 397; 77 Am. Dec., 303.

■It is next contended by the appellants that the circuit court had no jurisdiction to try the claim interposed by the appellees because no trial on that claim was had in the justice’s 'court, the point being that the circuit court has no jurisdiction in this cause except such as it acquired by appeal from, the judgment of the justice. The reply to this argument is, that the jurisdiction exercised by the court in trying the claimant’s issue is only ancillary, for the purpose of determining ■what disposition it shall make of property seized in a controversy in which the court has jurisdiction. The appeal by the plaintiff in attachment transferred to the circuit court the power to hear and determine the controversy between the plaintiff and defendant, and, as incident to this, was the power to determine all merely ancillary issues. By express provision of law, no trial of the right to the property levied on could be had until after judgment in favor of the plaintiff in attachment.”

The justice having rendered judgment against the plaintiff, it was impossible for him to submit the issue made up be[287]*287tween himself and the claimant until after an appeal to the circuit court and a trial and judgment in his favor there. The cause could uot be partly in one court and partly in another at the same .time, and since the judgment against the plaintiff precluded the justice from trying the issue between the plaintiff and the claimant, it necessarily follows that the whole case was carried to the circuit- court by the appeal of the plaintiff.

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Related

O'brien v. Norris, Caldwell & Co.
16 Md. 122 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1860)
Morris v. Shryock
50 Miss. 590 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1874)

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Bluebook (online)
69 Miss. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreyfus-v-mayer-son-co-miss-1891.