Groschke v. Bardenheimer

15 Mo. App. 353, 1884 Mo. App. LEXIS 57
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 Mo. App. 353 (Groschke v. Bardenheimer) 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
Groschke v. Bardenheimer, 15 Mo. App. 353, 1884 Mo. App. LEXIS 57 (Mo. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Bardenheimer was summoned as garnishee on an execution issued on a judgment obtained by Groschke against [355]*355one Johl. The garnishee denied any indebtedness to Johl, except that he said in his answer to interrogatories, that, on September 20, 1882, he owed Johl $800, for which indebtedness, he, on that day, executed and delivered to Johl the note of him, Bardenheimer, for that sum, which note was negotiable and payable at six months, with interest at five per cent per annum. The garnishee further said that he had been informed that this note was negotiated ; and that it is held by a person unknown to the garnishee, and is in possession of the Mechanics’ Bank, but whether as holder, or for collection, the garnishee is not informed.

The plaintiff filed a denial, and afterwards an amended denial. These denials are to the same effect, and allege that Bardenheimer, after he was summoned as garnishee, conspired with Johl and one Foell to deprive plaintiff of his recovery against Johl, in furtherance of which conspiracy Bardenheimer, on December 13, 1882, executed the note mentioned in this answer, and delivered the same to Johl, who then indorsed and delivered the same to Foell, who gave no consideration for the transfer, and received the same for the fraudulent purpose mentioned. Knowingthat Bardenheimer had been summoned as garnishee herein; and that Foell holds the note for Johl’s benefit.

Before the amended denial was filed, plaintiff moved for an order on Johl to produce in court the note in question. The trial judge heard testimony in support of this motion. After which he overruled the motion in the following language : —

“The testimony in support of this motion leaves my mind in so much doubt as to the right of Mr. Foell to hold and collect the proceeds of this nóte, that I shall not order him to deliver the note into court. ' This proceeding is summary without the intervention of a jury, and I do not feel disposed to make an arbitrary order divesting a party of the possession of property unless the proof is very clear. There are other modes of trying the question of [356]*356the good faith of the parties and I prefer to give the parties the benefit of a jury trial.”

The amended denial and reply were then filed, and the issues thus made were submitted to a jury under instructions given by the court. The jury found that Bardenheimer was indebted to Johl in the sum of $825. Motions in arrest and for a new trial were overruled, and the court made an order that the garnishee pay to the sheriff, for the use of plaintiff, before June 30, 1883, the amount found by the jury to be due. Afterwards the court set aside the order overruling the motions in arrest and for new trial, and continued the motions to the next term. Meanwhile plaintiff had sued out an alias execution to the October term, under which the sheriff levied upon $2,100 of money as the property of defendant Johl. This money was claimed by Johl’s wife; plaintiff gave bond to the sheriff, and he applied the money to the execution, and paid over to plaintiff $1,844.65 in full of his debt and interest, leaving $178.19 in the sheriff’s hands. This payment was made subject to the claim, and the sheriff made return accordingly. Defendant then pleaded this payment to plaintiff in bar; and the facts appearing to the court as stated, the court overruled the motion for new trial and in arrest, and ordered that all further proceedings upon the verdict be finally stayed, and that plaintiff recover of defendant the costs up to July 25, 1883, the date on which plaintiff received the money from the sheriff, and that the costs after that date be taxed against plaintiff, and that executions issue accordingly.

Both parties appeal.

1. It is claimed by appellant Bardenheimer that the denial of the answer of the garnishee states no facts constituting a cause of action. It states that the note described in the answer of the garnishee was the property of the execution defendant when the garnishee was summoned, and continued to be his property until after its maturity; that [357]*357the garnishee, after he was summoned, combined with the execution defendant and Foell to deprive plaintiff of his right to recover the $800, admitted in the garnishee’s answer to be due since September 20, 1882; that- the note was fraudulently made and delivered by the garnishee to the execution defendant, who indorsed and delivered the same to Foell without consideration ; and that Foell received the same knowing the garnishee had been served, and holds the same for the use of the execution defendant; and that all this was done in pursuance of a fraudulent purpose on the part of the parties concerned to defraud the execution plaintiff. We do not perceive why these allegations, if tested by the rules of pleading and practice applicable to a petition, are not good enough to support the verdict. Whether the denial was demurrable we need not inquire.

2. It is contended by defendant that the court erred in allowing plaintiff to introduce the books, ledger, journal, and cash book, and check book of the witness Foell. The ground of this objection is, that the only purpose of this testimony was to impeach Foell by contradicting and discrediting his testimony and that this was not competent, because Foell was plaintiff’s witness.. It is true that the general rule of law is, that a party can not discredit the testimony of his own witness, or show his incompetency. But a person may sometimes resort to other evidence to prove his case though denied by the witness first called by him to support it. These books were not introduced to contradict any statement of the witness as to what these books contained. The case was one in which plaintiff assumed the task of proving fraud from circumstances. He had a right to introduce the books of the witness, and it was for the jury to determine from all the statements of all the witnesses whether the purchase of the Bardenheimer note from Johl by Foell was a bona fide purchase, or a merely color-able transaction for the purpose of making it appear that [358]*358an indebtedness-once really existing from Johl to Bardenheimer, was due, not to Bardenlieimer, but to Foell.

3. Defendant insists that there is no evidence whatever to warrant the finding of the jury that Bardenlieimer, at the time of the garnishment, was indebted to Johl. As to this-it must be said that there is often no direct evidence of fraud. It must be inferred from the circumstances. Foell states most positively that he bought the note of Bardenheimer from Johl on the 11th of December, the day before garnishment, at the request of Johl, and merely to gain the interest, the note having about three months to run. He is corroborated as to the fact that he paid the face of the note about that time in bank notes of small denominations, to Johl, and then received the paper. But Foell was not a man of much means; he was in a small way of business; no entry of the transaction appears upon his books. His check book shows that he did not draw this $800 out of bank. He can not, or will not, explain where it came from ; and would seem from his statements to have bepn carrying it about in his pocket. Sixty days afterwards, without any apparent reason, he lends $700 to JohPs wife. There is some evidence tending to show an effort on Johl’s part, about the date of the garnishment, to get Bardenlieimer to allow him to take up the note before maturity, and a quarrel between them because Bardenlieimer would not do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Mo. App. 353, 1884 Mo. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groschke-v-bardenheimer-moctapp-1884.