Hemelreich v. Carlos

24 Mo. App. 264, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 179
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 Mo. App. 264 (Hemelreich v. Carlos) 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
Hemelreich v. Carlos, 24 Mo. App. 264, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 179 (Mo. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Philips, P. J.

This is an action of replevin, instituted in the Moniteau circuit court, and tried on change of venue in the Cooper circuit court, before Hon. T. M. Rice, sitting as special judge. The action is for the recovery of a stock of goods, merchandise, etc. Petition in the usual form. The answer tendered the general issue, and pleaded that the defendant, as sheriff of Moniteau county, under a writ of execution issued on a [269]*269judgment from the circuit court of said county ' in favor of-, against Morris Hemelreich,. had seized said goods as the property of said defendant in execution. It then alleged property in said Morris, and charged that the claim of plaintiff thereto was fraudulent against the creditors of said Morris, and especially as against the plaintiff in said execution. The reply tendered the general issue.

The cause was submitted for trial before the court sitting as a jury. The court found the issues for defendant, finding the property to be of the value of two thousand dollars, assessing the damages at one cent, and rendering judgment against plaintiff and her securities for the return of the property, or that they pay the sum of eleven hundred-dollars, the amount of the delivery bond, at the election of defendant, with costs. To reverse this judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error.

I, As we discover no valid objection to the declarations of law given by the court at the instance of the-defendant — the plaintiff having asked no declarations — • the only question, as to the verdict, is, was there any evidence to support it? Counsel for plaintiff is in error-in assuming that, as the plaintiff was found in possession of the goods at the time of the seizure under the-execution, the law will presume the plaintiff wasprima facie the owner, and the burden rested upon the defendant to overcome, by affirmative proof, this presumption. This may be conceded to be the general raleas between parties sui juris. But the record in this-case shows that the plaintiff was and is a married woman, the wife of said Morris Hemelreich, the defendant in said execution. It has been expressly held by this court that, as to a feme covert found in possession of personal property, the presumption of law is that her possession is that of the husband. McFerran v. Kinney, 22 Mo. App. 555. This view is also sustained by the Supreme Court in Weil v. Simmons (66 Mo. 619-620).

[270]*270The burden, therefore, rested on the plaintiff to show by evidence, to the satisfaction of the jury, against the presumption which the law makes that this property belonged to the husband, that she in fact was the sole and separate owner.

The plaintiff undertook by her own testimony, unsupported, to overcome this prima facie case against her claim. The case is argued here as if her statements, as witness in her own behalf, imported absolute verity, and that the trier of the facts had no right to disregard them. The law in its progress has not, and should not, enlarge upon the wise observation of Lord Coke, that “with respect to the questions of law the jury must nof respond, but only the judge; so, or in like manner, oí' under like restrictions, the judge must not respond to-questions of fact, but only the jury.” Responsive to this fundamental idea in our jurisprudence, it is axiomatic, in practice, that the jury are the sole judges of the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses ; and the court has' no power to coerce the triers of the facts to credit any witness. Gregory v. Chambers, 78 Mo. 294; Cannon v. Moore, 17 Mo. App. 102.

Where the court is satisfied that the jury has been swayed by undue passion or prejudice, or acted in disregard of the instructions of the court, or against the plainest dictates of truth and justice, it may direct a 'venire de novo. There its province ends.

The common law, which rested so long on the wis-. dom and experience of English and American law givers, absolutely disqualified a party to the action as a witness in his own behalf. It went upon the law of human nature, that self-interest, as a rule, was too strong for the dominion of unmixed truth. And while our statute now renders such party a competent witness, the fact of such interest remains a proper subject for the consideration of the jury in estimating the value to be attached to such testimony.

In order to protect, as far as the rules of law will. [271]*271permit, the rights of this plaintiff, we have examined with much patience and. care the testimony, as furnished ns by the abstracts herein. If there is any important fact not seen by us in this transcript it is the fault of the plaintiff’s attorney, who has not complied with the rule of this court in furnishing a complete abstract of the evidence. He has made merely statements of his conclusions of the evidence, rather than the whole evidence, or excerpts from the record. We will not go to the transcript only in instances where counsel disagree as to a given point.

While plaintiff’s testimony, in its sweeping statements, might well have warranted the trial judge in finding the issues for her, we feel compelled to say, that in its minor details and particularization, by which the cross-examiner sifts out of the bulk of the story in chief,' the pure grains of truth, there appear strong circumstances of internal improbability. It is somewhat contradictory in essentials, inconsistent with the experience and observation Of men in the business affairs of life; •as well as at variance with some important facts deposed to by other witnesses. They are such discrepancies, and improbabilities as to discredit her more general statements, and serve to point out to the eye of the experienced judge in such investigations the tortuous tracks that lead unmistakably to the door of fraud and concealment. We can see no good end, either to her, or the public, to be subserved by a detailed discussion of these facts. They are of such a character as to preclude us, by the well established practice of the appellate courts, from interfering with the province of the trial ■court on its conclusion as to the facts.

II. It is urged, for the first time, in the reply of •plaintiff’s counsel to defendant’s brief, that the special judge did not take the statutory prescribed oath. This objection comes too late. In the first place no part of the record is furnished us in the abstract of plaintiff ¡bearing upon this fact. No such question was raised in [272]*272the lower court, either in the motion for new trial or in-arrest. No such point is made in the brief furnished by the plaintiff to the opposite counsel. The objection comes too late, and must be disregarded. Carter v. Prior et al., 78 Mo. 222.

III. It is also assigned for error that the judgment of the circuit court cannot stand, for the reason that it was rendered for a money judgment against the plaintiff, a married woman. The record discloses this to be the fact. There is no question of the common law rule-that a judgment in personam cannot be rendered against a feme covert. It is a nullity. This judgment, though against others sui juris is an entirety, and if reversed, as to one must be as to all.

It is insisted, however, by defendant in error that under the act of 1883 (Laws Mo., 1883, p. 113), this rule-of the common law is so far modified as to authorize such judgment where the feme covert

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Bluebook (online)
24 Mo. App. 264, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemelreich-v-carlos-moctapp-1887.