Gallup v. Rhodes

230 S.W. 664, 207 Mo. App. 692, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 664 (Gallup v. Rhodes) 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
Gallup v. Rhodes, 230 S.W. 664, 207 Mo. App. 692, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BBADLEY, J.

Plaintiff sued to recover for the alleged wrongful taking of fixtures which she was using in a cafe. The cause was tried to a jury, and plaintiff recovered judgment for $500, and defendants appealed. It is not clear from the abstract of the record or the certified copy of judgment on file whether the judgment went against all the defendants.

Plaintiff alleges that on January 3, 1918, she owned and was in the possession of three dining tables, twelve *695 dining chairs, one water cooler, one lnnch counter, seven lunch stools, one. confection cabinet, one range stove, two ice boxes, four rustic seats, three ice cream tables, eleven ice cream serving chairs, one water keg, one book case, three show cases, one soda fountain, one marble top counter, one wooden counter, one ice cream cone holder, one root bear extract container, and one electric milk shaker, using same in her restaurant in East Prairie, and that on that date defendants, over plaintiff’s protest, wrongfully entered her place and took from her said property, and did not return it; that the property so taken was of 'the value of $1200,' and that she was damaged, in addition to the value of the property, in the sum of $600. Defendants answered by a general denial, and a special plea to the effect that on October 25, 1917, and prior thereto one Eussell was the owner and in possession of the property described in plaintiff’s petition, and was using the same in running a restaurant and cold drink stand, and that while Eussell was conducting this business he became indebted to defendants "Watson and Hollick in separate accounts; that on October 26,1917, Eussell sold in bulk the property described to plaintiff, and that said sale was within the Bulk Sales Law, and that said law was not complied with; and that within ninety days of said sale Hollick and Watson each brought a separate suit by attachment against Eussell, and attached said property as the property of Eussell, Hollick’s attachment being first; that defendant Ehodes was constable and served the attachment writs; that thereafter Hollick and Watson obtained judgments against Eussell and with the executions issued thereon defendant Ehodes levied upon said property and sold the same, and with the proceeds paid the judgment and costs in Hollick’s suit, and applied the balance on Watson’s execution. Eeplying plaintiff denies that the property was attached, and alleges that said property was at all times in her possession and under her control.

*696 Defendant Rhodes as constable made return on the Hollick attachment writ that he executed same (on November 9, 1917, “by reading to and in the presence of Ida Grallup; thereby certify that I cannot serve Clint Russel] as he is not in my county, and by attaching; the following described goods and chattels of the defendant, the herewith attached list of goods and chattels. ’ ’ The list described the same property as described in plaintiff’s petition. Plaintiff testified that Rhodes did nothing towards attaching the property except to read the writ to her, • and make a list, with her assistance, of the property. The property was left in plaintiff’s possession and she continued to use it in her restaurant until it was taken from her under the execution. Rhodes testified that he had no place to store the property and that he left it with plaintiff to keep for him as constable until he called for it. Plaintiff denied that she agreed to keep the property for Rhodes, but says that she kept it as her own. "When Rhodes took the property under the execution, plaintiff vigorously protested.

For plaintiff the court instructed that if the jury found from the evidence that on January 3, 1918, plaintiff owned and was in the possession of the property, describing it, and that on that date Rhodes entered the building where plaintiff had said property and over plaintiff’s protest took from her said property or any part thereof and carried the same away and did not return it or account for it otherwise, and that Rhodes was advised or instructed to take said property by Hollick or his attorney, then the verdict would be for plaintiff, unless certain predicated facts Avere found which would render the sale from Russell to plaintiff void under the bulk sales May. The court further instructed that in order to attach personal property it is necessary that the officer serAdng' the writ of attachment actually take such property into his possession and out of the possession of the person in Avhose hands it is at the time if the property is such that it can be *697 taken possession of by sncb officer, “unless you believe and find from the evidence that plaintiff did retain and agree to bold and keep the property for defendant Rhodes as his agent and custodian, and not. to hold it for herself as the vendee of of Russell.” For the defendants the court instructed on the Bulk Sales and the attachment issues. At the conclusion of the argument the court gave an instruction to the effect that Russell was, before he sold to plaintiff, conducting such a business that if sold in bulk the sale would be within the provisions of the Bulk Sales Law.

Defendants’ brief is not such as complies with our rules, and plaintiff challenges it on that ground. We can, however, gather from the brief and the record the decisive points. Defendants make in effect four assignments: First, that there is no substantial evidence to support the verdict; second, that the court erred in the admission of evidence; third, that the court erred in giving instructions for plaintiff; and fourth, that the verdict is excessive.

The first assignment proceeds on the theory that the sale from Russell to plaintiff was made without compliance with the Bulk Sales Law and was therefore void, and if void then plaintifThad no title and owned nothing, and regardless of the attachment being good or bad, defendants had the right under the execution to take and sell the property. If the sale was one that involved the Bulk Sales Law, and that law was not observed, then defendants had a right to proceed with the execution and take and sell the property, no question of limitation being involved. [Ward v. Stutzman, 195 Mo. App. 376, 191 S. W. 1090; Riley Penn. Oil Co. v. Symmonds, 195 Mo. App. 111, 190 S. W. 1038.] The statement, supra, that if the Bulk Sales Law applied to the sale in question the defendants here had a right to proceed with their execution regardless of the validity of the attachment is on the theory that plaintiff would be in no position to complain and not *698 on the theory that the judgment rendered on constructive service would be a valid judgment where there was in fact no lawful seizure of the res. [Weidman v. Byrne,— Mo. App.—226 S. W. 280.] There was considerable effort and evidence to show what Russell sold and how he conducted the business when 'he was in charge of the restaurant. There was evidence that Russell served meals, and cold drinks; kept some canned goods, apples, oranges, lemons, candies, chewing gum, cigars, crackers, bread, hams, etc., and sold some of these occasionally where the purchaser .took the purchase away to his home. There is nothing in the record to show that plaintiff bought anything of consequence from Russell except the tables, chairs, etc., levied on and sold.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 664, 207 Mo. App. 692, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallup-v-rhodes-moctapp-1921.