Hill v. Bell

19 S.W. 959, 111 Mo. 35, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 20, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 959 (Hill v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Bell, 19 S.W. 959, 111 Mo. 35, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 125 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

Black, J.

The plaintiffs are partners doing business in St. Louis as cotton factors and commission merchants, under the name of Hill, Fontaine & Co. They brought this suit by attachment against Robt. L. Bell and Charles Tistadt, on the fourth of February, 1889, to recover some $10,000 for goods sold and moneys advanced defendants. The amended affidavit for attachment places the indebtedness at $6,105, because of a payment made. It sets out four or five grounds of attachment, one being “that defendants have fraudulently concealed, removed and disposed of their property and effects, so as to hinder and delay their creditors.”

The defendant Bell filed a plea in abatement in which he says, “It is not true that the defendants have fraudulently conveyed and assigned their property and effects so as to hinder and delay their creditors.” The other grounds of attachment are denied in a like manner. After the plaintiffs and defendant Bell had announced ready for trial on the plea in abatement, the plaintiffs asked for judgment against Tistadt, which was refused. A like motion was made with, a like result at the close of the evidence for the plaintiff in chief.

The evidence shows that defendants were partners doing business at Caruthersville in Pemiscot county as merchants and dealers in cotton, under the firm-name [39]*39of Bell & Tistadt, and as such partners incurred the debt sued for. They disagreed in the conduct of their business, and in view of this fact Bell purchased or agreed to purchase the interest of his partner, assuming the payment of partnership debts, as we understand the evidence. This agreement was made on the ninth of January, 1889. They started to St. Louis to see the plaintiffs on the same day, and were there on the eleventh'of that month. Bell then informed the plaintiffs of the disagreement, and at the same time made an agreement with them whereby they were to advance him some $3,000 to buy the interest of Tistadt. Pursuant thereto plaintiffs gave Bell $500. The plaintiffs advised Bell at the same time to continue the partnership. On the twenty-fifth of the same month the defendants notified the plaintiffs that they had forty-five bales of cotton in the seed, for which they had given their due bills, and asked an advance of $600. The plaintiffs supposed the defendants had concluded to continue their partnership relation and forwarded the $600, but stopped the same in transiki, because of a letter received from Bell. In this letter Bell informed them that he had become of age on the twenty-fourth of January; that he had determined to disaffirm all of his contracts of a mercantile character; that they could take such action as seemed to them best as to the debt of Bell and Tistadt; that they had better send an agent to see Tistadt; stating also that he saw no ground for attachment against Tistadt. Bell’s alleged excuse for disaffirming his contracts was that he had been imposed upon by Tistadt as to the amount of the partnership debts. Thereupon the plaintiffs sent thejr agent, Mr. O’Donnell, to the defendants’ place of business. He got some thirty-two bales of cotton, but being unable to collect the balance of the debt commenced this suit.

[40]*40The further evidence in support of the attachment is in substance this: Mr. Hill, one of the plaintiffs, says that in the conversation had with Bell on the eleventh of January, Bell accused his partner of being a thief and of taking money from the cash receipts and not accounting for the same, and that he had caught Tistadt doing this on two occasions; hence, the desire to buy out Tistadt. Mr. O’Donnell testified to the same thing, but being asked what amount Bell said his partner took answered probably $100 in one instance, and $60 or $70 in another. Bell says he did not make these alleged statements; that what he said was this, that the cash register fell short $25, and he was satisfied Tistadt took it; that he may have mentioned one other transaction in which Tistadt got some little articles out of the store for himself. The substance of his evidence is that he informed plaintiffs of his belief as to these matters, but that he had no proof of them, and did not want to continue the partnership.

There is other evidence to the effect that Bell had possession of the store from the ninth to the twenty-fifth of January, at which date he disaffirmed the contract whereby he purchased the partnership property.

On this state of the case, the court sitting as a jury found for the defendants, and gave judgment “that the plaintiffs take nothing by their writ of attachment herein,, and that the defendants have and recover of the plaintiffs” their costs in and about the attachment proceedings.

1. The principal complaint is that it was error prejudicial to the plaintiffs to refuse a default against Tistadt; that if a default had been allowed the plaintiffs would have sustained their attachment, saved their debt against the defendant partners, and relieved themselves from liability on the attachment bond.

[41]*41Although the plea in abatement filed by Bell is, in form, a denial for himself and Tistadt of the matters stated in the affidavit for attachment, still it is the plea of Bell only. Tistadt filed no plea, and he thereby, for himself, confessed the truth of the matters stated in the affidavit. Now the motion was simply one for judgment against Tistadt. If by this motion the plaintiffs desired a judgment by default for failure to answer the petition, then the ruling on the motion is not before us for review; for this appeal simply brings up the proceedings on the attachment. If they desired a default for failure to plead in abatement, then the answer was and is that they were not entitled to such a judgment. Where there is a plea in abatement and the finding thereon is for the plaintiffs, the court should render a judgment sustaining the attachment; but if the finding is for defendant then the judgment should be that the attachment be abated at the cost of the plaintiff and his sureties. Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 562. Where the defendant files no plea in abatement, the attachment stands in full force and effect without any interlocutory judgment. There is no such a thing known to our practice as a default for a failure to plead in abatement to a writ of attachment.

The real question seems to be whether the trial court rendered the proper judgment on the finding for Bell on his.plea. Though the judgment is informal in that it does not, in terms, abate the attachment, still it declares that the plaintiffs take nothing by their writ of attachment. This is, in effect, a judgment abating the attachment as to both defendants. Although it is not stated in any of the pleadings that defendants were partners, it was conceded throughout the trial that they were partners, and that the debt sued upon was a partnership debt, and that the. writ of attachment was [42]*42levied upon partnership property. The case, therefore, is this:

Both partners were sued upon a partnership debt, the writ of attachment ran against both of them, and was levied upon partnership property; one defendant only pleaded in abatement, and the finding thereon was in his favor. Should the judgment following this finding abate the entire attachment, or abate it only as to the defendant filing the plea?

It is to be observed in the first place that partners are in this state liable, jointly and severally, for the partnership debts.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 959, 111 Mo. 35, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-bell-mo-1892.