J. I. Case Plow Works v. Union Iron Works

56 Mo. App. 1, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 14
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 Mo. App. 1 (J. I. Case Plow Works v. Union Iron Works) 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
J. I. Case Plow Works v. Union Iron Works, 56 Mo. App. 1, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 14 (Mo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

— This was an action of replevin brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to. recover seventy-five walking cultivators.

The defendant answered alleging that they were engaged in a general storage and forwarding business at Kansas City, and that the property described in plaintiff’s petition was by a constable of Kaw Township, Jackson county, levied upon under an attachment proceeding in justice’s court, and delivered by said constable to the respondents for safe keeping and storage, and that by reason of said fact they, the respondents, have a lien against said property for storage, amounting to $ — :—.

At the trial, which resulted in judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff has appealed, it appeared from the undisputed evidence that, prior and up to the date of this suit, the Union Iron Works, defendant, was engaged in the business of a storage warehouseman in Kansas City, Missouri.

For several years prior to, and including, 1888, the J. I. Case Plow Works, plaintiff, had stored most of its agricultural implements kept in this city with the [5]*5defendant, the latter’s compensation being based upon the amount of space occupied in its warehouse.

A disagreement having arisen as to compensation for certain extra space occupied by plaintiff, and upon its refusal to pay defendant’s bill for such charges as claimed, defendant brought a suit for same before Justice Allen, of Kansas City, and appellant herein being a nonresident corporation, also sued out, a writ of attachment and under said writ the constable went to respondent’s warehouse and levied upon.the cultivators now in question in this suit. These goods were at that time on the space rented and occupied by the plaintiff herein. The articles being bulky and costly ■and hard to handle, the constable requested the manager of the defendant to take charge of the goods and store them in its warehouse. The defendant agreed with the constable to do this and gave him a receipt therefor, nothing being said by either party at that time about the charges for the same. The defendant then took the goods from the rented space occupied by the plaintiff and placed them in another part of its warehouse where they’remained until the termination of the attachment suit and the bringing of this suit. The constable at first desired to leave the goods on the space rented by. the plaintiff, but the manager of defendant claimed that he had nothing to do with that space, whereupon the constable made the above arrangements about storage with defendant.

The question presented by the record for our decision is, whether, under the circumstances already stated, the defendant had a lien on the property in controversy. It is not controverted that the property seized by the constable under the writ of attachment was not that of the defendant in the attachment, nor that the justice’s court had not properly acquired jurisdiction of it by virtue of the seizure made by the constable [6]*6under the writ. It may be, therefore, safely assumed that the property was in custodia legis at the time the-constable stored it with the defendant in its warehouse.

When property is seized on attachment the statute-sections 549, 4997, provides that the court may allow the officer having clxarge thereof such compensation for his trouble and expense in keeping the same as shall be reasonable and just. The statutory authority of the constable to store the property during the time it was in his custody under the writ, is not to be doubted.

Was the defendant’s warehouseman who stored the attached property received from the constable, in whose custody it was, entitled to a lien for his reasonable compensation therefor! It appears there was'no-agreement entered into between the constable and the defendant warehouseman that the former should pay storage on the property so received. But the contract, of a warehouseman with his customer is, to receive and keep and deliver to order, goods placed in his custody on payment of the lawful charges therefor, and when not expressed, one is implied. He has a lien at common law, a specific lien, not a general lien. Jones on Liens,, sec. 967; Edwards on Bailments, sec. 350; Devereux v. Fleming, 53 Fed. Rep. 401.

The attached property being in custodia legis, the power of the constable in respect to it is not different, from that of a receiver who has taken property in possession under the order of the court appointing him. It has been ruled that when a receiver was authorized by an order within the jurisdiction of the court to store goods, he was authorized to create a valid lien upon them by such storage. Ward v. Moffett, 38 Mo. App. 400; Vette v. Leonori, 42 Mo. App. 217. And as was well said by Judge Thompson in Wycoff v. Southern Hotel Co., 24 Mo. App. 382: “We do not doubt the principle that when personal property comes lawfully into the-[7]*7possession of a third person and he stores it, or otherwise cares for it and preserves it, he is entitled to a lien for his reasonable compensation.”

If the property in dispute had been sold under an order of the court in the attachment suit in pursuance of the authority conferred by section 547, Revised Statutes, it is quite clear that the purchaser would have acquired a title good against the world. Young v. Kellar, 94 Mo. 581. In such case no reason is perceived why the lien of the warehouseman on the property for its storage would not have attached to the proceeds arising from the sale in the custody of the court, nor why it could not have interpleaded in the attachment suit and therein set up its lien claim to so much of the fund as would pay its reasonable storage charges.

No doubt, it might waive the lien, and trust to the constable to include the amount of the storage charges in any allowance made to him under section 549. It would, in such case, look personally to the constable for payment. Such a charge of the constable would be a lien upon the property which would have to be satisfied before the proceeds of the sale of the property could be applied upon the judgment or execution. McNeil v. Bean, 32 Vt. 429.

But if, as is the fact here, the attached property was not sold at all, and the lien of the attachment is released by the defendants discharging the judgment and all costs taxed, what then becomes of the lien of the warehouseman for the storage due him? The constable has procured no allowance including the warehouseman’s storage, nor has the latter requested the former to do so. The property is no longer in custodia legis. The owner of it will not pay him his storage charges. Has he lost his lien, and must he surrender the possession of the property on the demand of the [8]*8owner? We think not; but, on the contrary, that, when the property was released from the lien of the attachment, the warehouseman’s lien remained and was as binding and effectual as if the property had been stored by the plaintiff owner himself, instead of by the constable who was authorized by law to do so. It can make no difference in principle whether property is stored by the owner or another who has it in lawful custody; for, in either case it is, as we think, alike, subject to the warehouseman’s common-law lien for the reasonable storage charges.

If property in custodia legis

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Mo. App. 1, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-i-case-plow-works-v-union-iron-works-moctapp-1894.