Kreher v. Mason

25 Mo. App. 291, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 306
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Mo. App. 291 (Kreher v. Mason) 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
Kreher v. Mason, 25 Mo. App. 291, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 306 (Mo. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Alexander Martin, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action to recover damages for the convcr[292]*292sion of twenty barrels of whiskey. It is alleged in the petition that Isaac M. Mason, sheriff of the city of St. Louis, in executing a writ of attachment against the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, on the twenty-eighth of August, 1884, seized the property in question, under directions from Adam Roth, in whose behalf the writ had been sued out; that eight of the twenty barrels so-seized were returned to the plaintiff, and that the remaining twelve were sold and disposed of by said sheriff, to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars.

The defendants, who join in their answer, admit the seizure of the twenty barrels under the writ, and plead that, afterwards, the sheriff returned eight of the barrels so seized, and that they were accepted by the plaintiff.

It is further alleged in the answer that on the same day another writ of attachment against the said Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, and in favor of Mihalovitch, Fletcher & Company, was received by the sheriff, and that, in pursuance of its command, he levied the same upon the said twenty barrels of whiskey, subject, however, to the attachment previously, on the same day, levied- on the same property; that, on the same day, but after the levies made In pursuance of the said writs, the plaintiff herein made claim for the said twenty barrels of whiskey, and served notice thereof in writing, as required by section 3, chapter 13, Revised Statutes ; that, thereupon, the said sheriff demanded of the said Adam Roth a bond of indemnity, which the said Roth-failed to give, and, thereupon, the said sheriff released his levy on the said property, so far as the Roth attachment was concerned; that, at the same time, the said sheriff demanded of the said Mihalovitch, Fletcher & Company a good and sufficient bond of indemnity: that the bond so demanded was, on the twenty-eighth day of August, 1884, given to and approved by the said sheriff, and returned by him into court,, as required by law.

[293]*293The reply consists of a general ‘denial, coupled with an averment that the claim of the plaintiff was made under the levy and proceedings of the Roth attachment, and before any other levy had been made.

It seems to be clear, from the evidence, that the property seized as the property of the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company belonged to the plaintiff. This property, when seized, was not on the premises of the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, but on the premises of the Sickles Saddlery Company, of which the plaintiff is the president. A watchman was placed in charge of it.

The next day after the seizure the sheriff, upon application to the court, obtained an order, in the Roth attachment case, to sell the whiskey as perishable property. Immediately thereafter, probably two days after the seizure, the sheriff removed the property so seized to the premises of the said Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, presumably for the purpose of making sale thereof, along with the other property seized as the property of the said company, which was held for sale by the sheriff.

When the sale came off, on the tenth of September, 1884, only twelve barrels were sold under the Mihalovitch writ. Immediately after the sale, the plaintiff was notified that the other eight barrels were on the premises of the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, subject to his order. In pursuance of this notice, the plaintiff accepted them there.

Among the papers returned by the sheriff into court appears the indemnity bond of Mihalovitch, Fletcher & Company to the sheriff, in their attachment suit against the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, dated August 29, 1884. This bond recites that the sheriff levied the writ of the said Mihalovitch, Fletcher & Company upon the twelve barrels, and that they had been claimed by the plaintiff, in accordance with the act of March 8, 1885, relating to the duties of the sheriff and marshal in [294]*294the county of St. Louis. There does not seem to have been any written claim by the plaintiff under the Mihal-. ovitch levy. It is probable that the sheriff treated the formal claim of the plaintiff under the Roth attachment as sufficient to justify his demand for a bond under the second attachment.

Upon objection, by the plaintiff,, this bond was excluded, from evidence, on the ground that it contained only, one surety, while the law required two. The bond was open to other objections and criticisms, which need not be considered here.

The sheriff’s returns on the two writs also appear in evidence, but, as they are both- without date, they fail to furnish evidence of the precise dates of the disputed acts and doings of the sheriff in controversy between the parties thereto. The writ, in the Roth attachment, contains two distinct memoranda of return. In one is recited the levy of August 28, 1884, on the twenty barrels. It, also, contains a recital, to the effect that eight out of the twenty had been applied on that attachment. It m ust be conceded that this is not very apt language to indicate a release of the seizure. Immediately following this memorandum appears another one, also signed by the sheriff, to the effect that the personal property, as above levied upon, had been claimed as per claim herewith filed, and that the plaintiff, having failed to give an indemnifying bond, the levy had been released. The return on the Mihalovitch writ recites a levy, on the twenty-eighth day of August, 1884, «pon the twenty barrels, subject to the Roth attachment, among- others. It, also, recites that twelve of the twenty barrels, so levied upon, were applied to the attachment, and that bond was given against claim for the same, and that the balance of the personal property, as levied upon, was sold under the previous attachment.

It may be remarked here, that this is not very apt language to indicate a release, under this writ,' of the eight barrels, which were returned to the plaintiff.

[295]*295Upon this evidence, the court trying the case rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, from which the defendants have appealed.

I. The most important question, bearing upon the substantial merits of the case, involves the ruling of the court in excluding from evidence the bond taken by the sheriff under the Mihalovitch writ. The sheriff, being informed by the plaintiff’s claim in the Roth attachment that the plaintiff claimed the whole twenty barrels, demanded a bond also from Mihalovitch, and that attaching creditor responded to the demand by furnishing a bond supposed to be sufficient to cover enough of the whiskey to satisfy his debt. But, as the bond was wanting in the requisite number of sureties, it materially failed to comply with the law. On this account, I think, it was properly excluded by the court. This ruling left the defendants without any evidence to support the defence they pleaded, a defence resting solely upon the statute, which purports to relieve the sheriff from all legal responsibility, when he has taken a good and sufficient bond of indemnity from the attaching creditor. Sess. Acts, 1855, p. 465, The claimant’s remedies are, thereafter, confined to a suit upon the bond. He may, also, sue the principal and sureties therein for a trespass. The State to use v. Donnelly, 9 Mo. App. 519. This exclusion of the bond leaves the case to be considered, in all respects, as if no bond had been given.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Mo. App. 291, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreher-v-mason-moctapp-1887.