Jaffray v. H. B. Claflin Co.

24 S.W. 761, 119 Mo. 117, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 761 (Jaffray v. H. B. Claflin Co.) 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
Jaffray v. H. B. Claflin Co., 24 S.W. 761, 119 Mo. 117, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 113 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Black, P. J.

This was a proceeding in the Greene county circuit court to settle the rights of attaching [120]*120creditors to a fund in tlie hands of the sheriff. The record before ns discloses the following state of facts.

On the fourth of December, 1890, Levy 8s Weinberg, a firm composed of Moses Levy and Michael J. Weinberg, confessed three judgments in favor of as. many banking corporations. On the same day executions were issued on the judgments, and the executions were at the same time levied upon a stock of goods owned by the judgment debtors. At the same time Weinberg commenced a suit against his partner Levy for the alleged purpose of dissolving the copartnership. The court, by a consent order, appointed Mr. Delaney receiver of the property and effects of Levy 8s Weinberg. On the next day, the fifth, the receiver qualified and the court then made an order directing the sheriff to turn the goods over to the receiver, subject to the lien of the executions.

Late in the evening of the fourth and after the executions had been levied and while the goods were still in the possession of the sheriff, three attachments were issued and by the sheriff levied upon the same stock of good, one in favor of the H. B. Claflin Co. against Levy 8s Weinberg, one in favor of the H. B. Claflin Co. against Moses Levy, and the other in favor of Earwell & Co. against Levy 8s Weinberg. The Claflin attachments were levied at 9:45, and the Earwell attachment at 10 o’clock in the afternoon. The goods were then in the possession of the sheriff.

The Claflin attachments were commenced by Mr, Heffernan as the attorney for the Claflin Co. The circuit court, in which the suits were commenced, was in session from the fourth to the ninth. On the sixth, seventh and eighth, the judge stated on several occasions that the Claflin Co. and Mr. Hefferman were in contempt of court, because of the levy of the attachments after the receiver had been appointed. This [121]*121matter came to a culmination on the evening of the eighth, when Mr. Heffernan ashed for a little time to produce authority to show that he was not in contempt, and the court declined to grant the time. Mr. Shelly, the agent of the Claflin Co. was present and feared his attorney would he humiliated and the company placed in an unfavorable attitude before the court. In view of all this he advised Mr. Heffernan to dismiss the Claflin suits. At the same time the judge said to Mr. Heffernan, “you ought to dismiss those suits and not be in contempt,” and thereupon Mr. Heffernan said, “I will dismiss them, under the circumstances.” Thereupon the suits were dismissed, the entry being as follows: “Now comes the plaintiff by its attorney, and on the suggestion of the court in regard to the jurisdiction in this ease, the property in controversy being in the hands of a receiver, on motion of the plaintiff’s attorney, the court orders that said case be dismissed.” Then follows a judgment for costs, which costs were then and there paid by. Mr. Shelly. A like dismissal was made in the case of The H. B. Claflin Co. v. Levy.

' At the opening of the court on the next morning, the ninth, Rothchild & Bro. appeared by their attorney and asked leave to attach the property in the hands of a receiver; and Jaffray & Co., the plaintiffs in this motion, asked the like leave. The judge, after reading some authorities presented by the attorney of Rothchild & Bro., said: “Before I grant this petition I shall set aside the orders of dismissal made in Mr. Heffernan’s cases.” Heffernan was then present representing the interests of his clients, and thereupon the court made the following order in each of the Claflin Co. cases: “Now at this day comes the plaintiff, by attorney, whereupon the court for good and sufficient reasons appearing, orders that the order made yesterday dismissing the plaintiff’s cause of action be and the, [122]*122same is set aside, and the plaintiff restored to all of its rights as attaching creditor, and the sheriff of G-reene county is ordered to make return on the attachment as originally made.” The sheriff had not and never did make the change in his levy of those writs.

Immediately after making these orders setting aside the dismissals, the court gave leave to Rothchild & Bro., and to Jaffray & Co. to attach, the Rothchild attachment being the prior in poipt of time. The sheriff then levied these two writs upon the goods, stating in his return that he levied them subject to the executions and the attachments of Claflin & Co. and Farwell & Co.

Levy & "Weinberg filed pleas in abatement in all of the attachment suits, but the pleas were thereafter withdrawn, and the attaching creditors in due time obtained judgments.

After satisfying the executions, there was in the hands of the sheriff the sum of $6,982. Treating the attachment of the Claflin Co. against the firm of Levy & Weinberg as having been duly reinstated, the attaching creditors would have priority in the following order and amounts: The H. B. Claflin Co., $5,125; Farwell & Co., $431; Rothchild & Bro., $1,672; Jaffray & Co., $5,645.

Jaffrey & Co. insist that the Claflin Co. lost its lien by reason of the dismissal of the attachment suit, and that the reinstatement of that suit did not reinstate the lien.

We may here notice the cases most in point cited to support these propositions. In Brown v. Harris (2 Greene (Iowa) 505), therehadbeen a suit by attachment before a justice of the peace. The plaintiff was nonsuited, and he in due time filed a motion to set aside the nonsuit, which motion was sustained, and he then recovered judgment. The supreme court held [123]*123that the nonsuit vacated the attachment lien, and that the order setting aside the nonsuit and granting a new trial did not revive it. That case, it must be conceded, goes to the full extent of the claim made by the appellants in this case. We cannot approve the ruling made in that case. Under our practice, an order setting aside a nonsuit and granting a new • trial, would, beyond all doubt, place the attachment just where it was before the nonsuit. Indeed, it was held in Iowa in a subsequent case that an appeal from a judgment for the defendant in the attachment would preserve the lien of the attachment, should the judgment of the trial court be reversed; and the court then said' the reasoning in the Broivn-Harris case was unsatisfactory and inconclusive, and so we say.

In Murphy v. Crew, 38 Ga. 139, there had been two attachments against the same person. The garnishees answered that they owed the defendant: The first attaching creditor dismissed his suit in vacation and at a subsequent date, and in term time, moved the court to reinstate the , attachment, the defendant consenting. It was held the case could only be reinstated subject to the rights of third persons, and that upon the dismissal of the first attachment the second attaching creditor obtained the right of priority. The right of priority, it was held, could not be divested by reinstating the first attachment at the next term of the court. That case is unlike the one in hand in several respects. There both attachments had been served before the dismissal, while here the appellants obtained leave to attach after the Claflin suit had been reinstated. The circumstances leading to the dismissal in that case do not appear.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 761, 119 Mo. 117, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaffray-v-h-b-claflin-co-mo-1893.