Guinta v. Jack Daniels Distilling Co.

244 S.W. 99, 211 Mo. App. 25, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 12
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 244 S.W. 99 (Guinta v. Jack Daniels Distilling Co.) 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
Guinta v. Jack Daniels Distilling Co., 244 S.W. 99, 211 Mo. App. 25, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 12 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

This action is one to recover actual and punitive damages for the alleged wrongful and malicious prosecution of a writ of attachment.

Upon the trial of the cause the jury rendered a verdict against the defendant, appellant here, for fifteen hundred dollars actual damages and two thousand dollars punitive damages. The plaintiff voluntarily remitted seven hundred dollars from the verdict for actual damages and subsequently entered a compulsory remittitur of one thousand dollars on the award for punitive damages and judgment was entered for the residue; from this judgment defendant appeals.

The writ of attachment was sued out by the defendant herein, before a justice of the peace, in an action brought by it against the plaintiff herein and Dominic Guinta, doing business as Guinta Grocery Company, based on an alleged account, for whisky purchased of defendant, in the amount of two hundred eighty-five dollars and twenty-seven cents.

The defendant on May 28, 1917, had the writ levied upon a stock of merchandise as the joint property of Frank and Dominic Guinta. On June 7, 1917, this stock was, during the pendency of the suit, sold by order of the justice as being perishable property.

The affidavit filed in the attachment suit averred, as grounds for attachment, that the defendants therein had *Page 28 fraudulently contracted the indebtedness sued upon and that they had concealed their property so as to hinder or delay their creditors.

The attachment suit was defended only by Frank Guinta, the other defendant, Dominic Guinta, although duly served, not entering his appearance. On June 4, 1917, Frank Guinta delivered to the constable, who executed the writ of attachment, a written notice verified by his affidavit, wherein he claimed the property, levied on under the writ of attachment, as absolute owner and denied that he was a partner with Dominic Guinta or that he was indebted to the attachment creditor. Frank Gunta filed no plea in abatement, but filed with the justice an answer denying the alleged partnership and denying that he purchased any of the goods sued upon or that he was indebted to the attachment creditor.

On the trial the issues were found in favor of Frank Guinta. The judgment rendered by the justice being as follows: "Attachment dismissed as to Frank Guinta. Attachment sustained as to Dominic Guinta for two hundred eighty-five dollars. Judgment for plaintiff against Dominic Guinta for two hundred eighty-five dollars." No appeal was taken from said judgment.

Among the errors assigned, the one of most consequence relates to the overruling of a demurrer offered by the defendant at the close of all the evidence. It is contended that the demurrer should have been sustained for the reason that the plaintiff has no cause of action for wrongful seizure of the goods in question because the attachment against the goods was sustained. It is argued that said judgment was an adjudication that Dominic Guinta was the owner of the goods seized and res adjudicata as to the rightfulness of the attachment, and conclusive upon the plaintiff, who took no appeal, as to the ownership of the property attached.

To this contention we cannot agree. The attachment as to the plaintiff herein was dismissed and a judgment was rendered in his favor on the merits. The case then *Page 29 stood just as if the attachment had been issued only against Dominic Guinta and the judgment sustaining the attachment as to him did not render the property attached subject to the judgment rendered against Dominic Guinta, if the property belonged to the plaintiff herein.

The written notice given to the constable, who executed the writ of attachment, wherein the plaintiff claimed the goods, seized under the writ of attachment, as his own, was not before the justice in the attachment suit. This was a notice given under section 2874, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1919, to compel the constable to take of the plantiff a bond conditioned to indemnify plaintiff against all damages which he might sustain in consequence of the seizure and sale of the property levied upon. It was not binding on the constable because said section applies only to persons other than the defendant in the execution, and no issue was raised in the attachment suit by reason of the giving of said notice.

In the attachment suit there was no finding made by the court as to the ownership of the property attached and its judgment sustaining the attachment does not decide such ownership.

Furthermore if the contention advanced by counsel, that a defendant in an attachment execution, against whom the attachment has been dismissed and in whose favor a judgment on the merits has been rendered, is not entitled to recover in a suit for wrongful prosecution of the writ of attachment because the attachment against the property attached was sustained against his co-defendant, be construed as correct, then such a defendant would be without legal remedy for the wrongful seizure and sale of his property. The law does not perpetrate such injustice.

But counsel argues that the plaintiff herein slept on his right to appeal from the judgment rendered in the attachment suit. The remedy by appeal was not open to the plaintiff because no judgment was rendered against *Page 30 him from which to perfect an appeal. A judgment was rendered in the main action in his favor from which defendant took no appeal. There can be no doubt, therefore, that an action has accrued in plaintiff's favor for injuries caused by the attachment. [Talbot v. Plaster Co., 151 Mo. App. 538, 132 S.W. 15; Hill v. Bell,111 Mo. 44, 19 S.W. 959; Boekhoff v. Gruner, 47 Mo. App. 24; State ex rel. North v. Hadlock, 52 Mo. App. 300; State ex rel. v. Goodhue,74 Mo. App. 162; State to use v. Beldsmeier, et al., 56 Mo. 226; Toovey v. Baxter, 59 Mo. App. 474; Talbot v. Plaster Co.,167 Mo. App. 542, 152 S.W. 377; Fry v. Estes, 52 Mo. App. 1; State v. Yount, 186 Mo. App. 258, 172 S.W. 431.]

Counsel for defendant further contend that the plaintiff is not entitled to a recovery because he failed to file a plea in abatement in the attachment suit, putting in issue the facts alleged in the affidavit on which the attachment was sued out.

In the case at bar a final judgment was rendered in the main action in the attachment suit in plaintiff's favor, plaintiff was therefore entitled to bring this action although he filed no plea in abatement in the attachment proceeding.

In passing upon this question, SHERWOOD, Judge, in State to use v. Beldsmeier, et al., 50 Mo. l.c. 230 says: "If the proposition advanced by the defendants, that the relator is not entitled to a recovery because of his defending and defeating the action against him on the merits, instead of by means of a dilatory plea, be construed as correct, this result will follow: That the statute will become an engine of incalculable and intolerable oppression in the hands of any unscrupulous man, who, with impunity, could attach the property of a non-resident, keep the case pending in court from year to year, and then dismiss or bring it to trial at his leisure without incurring any liability beyond the paltry expense of an ordinary suit, simply because the defendant, although not his debtor, was unable to successfully plead *Page 31 in abatement.

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Related

Fry v. Estes
52 Mo. App. 1 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1892)
State ex rel. North v. Hadlock
52 Mo. App. 297 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1893)
Toovey v. Baxter
59 Mo. App. 470 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1894)
Talbott v. Great Western Plaster Co.
132 S.W. 15 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1910)
Talbot v. Great Western Plaster Co.
152 S.W. 377 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1912)
State ex rel. Pinkley v. Yount
172 S.W. 431 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)
McLaughlin v. Davis
14 Kan. 168 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1875)
State ex rel. Clifford v. Beldsmeier
56 Mo. 226 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1874)
Hill v. Bell
19 S.W. 959 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1892)
Boekhoff v. Gruner
47 Mo. App. 22 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1891)
State ex rel. Rigby v. Goodhue
74 Mo. App. 162 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)
Renkert v. Elliott
79 Tenn. 235 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1883)

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 99, 211 Mo. App. 25, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guinta-v-jack-daniels-distilling-co-moctapp-1922.